Hh. Morris et al., GANGLIOGLIOMA AND INTRACTABLE EPILEPSY - CLINICAL AND NEUROPHYSIOLOGIC FEATURES AND PREDICTORS OF OUTCOME AFTER SURGERY, Epilepsia, 39(3), 1998, pp. 307-313
Purpose: To review the clinical, neurophysiologic, and radiological da
ta of patients with ganglioglioma who had undergone evaluation and sur
gery in our Epilepsy Program. Methods: The medical and neurophysiologi
c records of 38 patients with intractable epilepsy and ganglioglioma w
ere reviewed. Data underwent statistical analysis. Results: There were
28 temporal and 10 extratemporal resections, with a mean age at seizu
re onset of 10.5 years and mean age at surgery of 22 years. Five tumor
resections performed earlier were recorded. Twenty-nine patients had
auras and 20 had secondarily generalized seizures. All 28 patients wit
h temporal tumor had complex partial seizures. Preoperative MRI demons
trated the tumor in 36 of 36 patients: 17 of 29 demonstrated gadoliniu
m enhancement, and 17 of 36 had mass effect. Scalp interictal sharp wa
ves were present in 32 patients, and in 15 they were multiregional. In
two patients, scalp EEG seizure onset was from the hemisphere contral
ateral to the tumor. Postoperatively, 79% of patients (30 of 38) were
seizure-free (Engel's class I) at 6 months, 72% at 1 year (26 of 36),
and 63%, at 2 years (20 of 32). Excellent outcome was associated with
a lower age at operation (p = 0.008), shorter duration of epilepsy (p
= < 0.01), absence of generalized seizures (p = < 0.01), and no epilep
tiform discharges on a postoperative EEG (p = 0.01). Conclusions: Good
surgical outcome is expected in patients with ganglioglioma despite y
ears of medically resistant seizures, Good outcome may be achieved des
pite EEG findings that may conflict with tumor location, and is more l
ikely when surgery is performed relatively soon after epilepsy onset.