{Reference Type}: Systematic Review {Title}: Surgical treatment of epileptic encephalopathy with spike-and-wave activation in sleep: A systematic review and meta-analysis. {Author}: Ma Y;Kaminski M;Kim A; {Journal}: Seizure {Volume}: 119 {Issue}: 0 {Year}: 2024 Jul 19 {Factor}: 3.414 {DOI}: 10.1016/j.seizure.2024.05.008 {Abstract}: OBJECTIVE: Epileptic Encephalopathy / Developmental Epileptic Encephalopathy with spike-and-wave activation during sleep (EE/DEE-SWAS) is a self-limiting childhood epilepsy syndrome but may cause permanent neurocognitive impairment. Surgical interventions have been controversial in the treatment of EE/DEE-SWAS. This systematic review aims to evaluate the efficacy of various surgical procedures on the outcomes of EE/DEE-SWAS.
METHODS: A systematic review was performed per the PRISMA guidelines. A total of 14 retrospective studies were identified, comprising 131 cases of EE/DEE-SWAS treated with epilepsy surgery. The review analyzed presurgical data, surgical interventions, as well as outcomes related to seizures, EEG, and neuropsychological assessments.
RESULTS: Epilepsy surgery was successfully performed in 131 cases with minor complications. The average age was 2.6 years at seizure onset and 5.0 years at diagnosis of SWAS. Excellent seizure control (Engel I and II) was achieved in 80.6 %, 78.6 %, 77.4 % and 27.2 % of patients receiving hemispherectomies, focal resections, multiple subpial transections (MSTs), and corpus callosotomies (CCTs), respectively. EEG SWAS resolution was seen in 79.7 % of hemispherectomy cases, 78.6 % in focal resections, 63.9 % in MSTs, and 8.3 % in CCTs. Neurocognitive and behavioral improvement was noted in 58.0 %, 71.4 %, 58.3 % and 16.7 % for patients receiving hemispherectomies, focal resections, MSTs, and CCTs, respectively. A correlation between improved seizure control and SWAS resolution was observed with improved neuropsychological outcomes.
CONCLUSIONS: Epilepsy surgery is a safe and effective treatment for carefully selected children with drug-resistant EE/DEE-SWAS. Patients who underwent epilepsy surgery had reduction of seizure burden, SWAS resolution and improvements in neurocognitive and behavioral function.