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The phenotype of bilateral hippocampal sclerosis and its management in “real life” clinical settings

  • Arjune Sen
  • , Patricia Dugan
  • , Piero Perucca
  • , Daniel Costello
  • , Hyunmi Choi
  • , Carl Bazil
  • , Rod Radtke
  • , Danielle Andrade
  • , Chantal Depondt
  • , Sinead Heavin
  • , Jane Adcock
  • , W. Owen Pickrell
  • , Ronan McGinty
  • , Fábio Nascimento
  • , Philip Smith
  • , Mark I. Rees
  • , Patrick Kwan
  • , Terence J. O'Brien
  • , David Goldstein
  • , Norman Delanty

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Objective: There is little detailed phenotypic characterization of bilateral hippocampal sclerosis (HS). We therefore conducted a multicenter review of people with pharmacoresistant epilepsy and bilateral HS to better determine their clinical characteristics. Methods: Databases from 11 EPIGEN centers were searched. For identified cases, clinicians reviewed the medical notes, imaging, and electroencephalographic (EEG), video-EEG, and neuropsychometric data. Data were irretrievably anonymized, and a single database was populated to capture all phenotypic information. These data were compared with phenotyped cases of unilateral HS from the same centers. Results: In total, 96 patients with pharmacoresistant epilepsy and bilateral HS were identified (43 female, 53 male; age range = 8-80 years). Twenty-five percent had experienced febrile convulsions, and 27% of patients had experienced status epilepticus. The mean number of previously tried antiepileptic drugs was 5.32, and the average number of currently prescribed medications was 2.99; 44.8% of patients had cognitive difficulties, and 47.9% had psychiatric comorbidity; 35.4% (34/96) of patients continued with long-term medical therapy alone, another 4 being seizure-free on medication. Sixteen patients proceeded to, or were awaiting, neurostimulation, and 11 underwent surgical resection. One patient was rendered seizure-free postresection, with an improvement in seizures for 3 other cases. By comparison, of 201 patients with unilateral HS, a significantly higher number (44.3%) had febrile convulsions and only 11.4% had experienced status epilepticus. Importantly, 41.8% (84/201) of patients with unilateral HS had focal aware seizures, whereas such seizures were less frequently observed in people with bilateral HS, and were never observed exclusively (P =.002; Fisher's exact test). Significance: The current work describes the phenotypic spectrum of people with pharmacoresistant epilepsy and bilateral HS, highlights salient clinical differences from patients with unilateral HS, and provides a large platform from which to develop further studies, both epidemiological and genomic, to better understand etiopathogenesis and optimal treatment regimes in this condition.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1410-1420
Number of pages11
JournalEpilepsia
Volume59
Issue number7
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 2018

Keywords

  • EPIGEN
  • bilateral hippocampal sclerosis
  • epilepsy surgery
  • phenotype
  • seizure semiology

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