Incomplete resection of focal cortical dysplasia is the main predictor of poor postsurgical outcome

@article{Krsek2009IncompleteRO,
  title={Incomplete resection of focal cortical dysplasia is the main predictor of poor postsurgical outcome},
  author={Pavel Krsek and Bruno Maton and Parul Jayakar and Pat Dean and Brandon M Korman and Gustavo Rey and Catalina Dunoyer and Esperanza Pacheco-J{\'a}come and Glenn Morrison and John Ragheb and Harry V. Vinters and Trevor J. Resnick and Michael S. Duchowny},
  journal={Neurology},
  year={2009},
  volume={72},
  pages={217 - 223}
}
Background: Focal cortical dysplasia (FCD) is recognized as the major cause of focal intractable epilepsy in childhood. Various factors influencing postsurgical seizure outcome in pediatric patients with FCD have been reported. Objective: To analyze different variables in relation to seizure outcome in order to identify prognostic factors for selection of pediatric patients with FCD for epilepsy surgery. Methods: A cohort of 149 patients with histologically confirmed mild malformations of… 
Repeat surgery for focal cortical dysplasias in children: indications and outcomes.
TLDR
Reoperation may be clinically beneficial in patients with intractable epilepsy due to FCD and patients with concordant intraoperative ECoG and MRI localization may benefit from extended resection of residual dysplasia at the margins of the previous lesional cavity, and iMRI may offer benefits as a quality control mechanism to ensure that a complete resection has been accomplished.
Longitudinal analyses of the surgical outcomes of pediatric epilepsy patients with focal cortical dysplasia.
TLDR
A better method to define the extent of FCD is required to assist with resection, especially in nonlesional epilepsy, because a complete resection of F CD has a strong prognostic implication for seizure control.
Long‐term seizure outcome after epilepsy surgery in patients with mild malformation of cortical development and focal cortical dysplasia
TLDR
Differences between mMCD and FCD in clinical presentation and surgical outcome after surgery are suggested and patients with mMCD developed seizures later in life and their lesions had a predilection for location in the temporal lobe and remained undetected by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) more frequently.
Electroclinical and Multimodality Neuroimaging Characteristics and Predictors of Post-Surgical Outcome in Focal Cortical Dysplasia Type IIIa
TLDR
Several preoperative factors appear to be predictive of the postoperative outcome and may help in optimizing the selection of ideal candidates to benefit from epilepsy surgery.
Intraoperative MRI-guided resection of focal cortical dysplasia in pediatric patients: technique and outcomes.
TLDR
iMRI-guided resection of FCD in pediatric patients precluded the need for repeat surgery and resulted in the achievement of complete resection in all the patients, leading to a high rate of postoperative seizure freedom.
Management of cortical dysplasia in epilepsy.
TLDR
An overview on the literature of the last ten years focuses on histological appearance and classification, pathogenetic mechanisms and clinical presentation of cortical dysplasias, and an outlook is given on the development of future novel treatment options that might be minimally invasive and help especially the patient group who is inoperable or has failed epilepsy surgery.
The Surgical and Cognitive Outcomes of Focal Cortical Dysplasia
TLDR
The seizure and cognitive outcomes of epilepsy surgery for FCD in children and several prognostic factors influencing seizure outcome after surgery will be discussed in detail.
The influence of lesion volume, perilesion resection volume, and completeness of resection on seizure outcome after resective epilepsy surgery for cortical dysplasia in children.
TLDR
The completeness of FCD resection in children is a significant predictor of seizurefreedom and neither lesion volume nor the further resection of perilesional tissue is predictive of seizure freedom.
...
1
2
3
4
5
...

References

SHOWING 1-10 OF 32 REFERENCES
Outcome of epilepsy surgery in focal cortical dysplasia
TLDR
Circumscribed lesionectomy of focal dysplastic lesions provides seizure relief in patients with chronic drug resistant temporal and extratemporal epilepsy.
Long-term outcome after epilepsy surgery for focal cortical dysplasia.
TLDR
Focal cortical dysplasias are a distinct subgroup of malformations of cortical development and have a favorable outcome after resection, and evidence of clear margins was significantly associated with an improved seizure outcome.
Surgical Treatment of Epilepsy in Children Caused by Focal Cortical Dysplasia
TLDR
After, on average, 4 years since treatment, 10 children with FCD and surgically treated intractable epilepsy are seizure free, and Predictors of good outcome are an MRI-defined lesion and increased cortical disorganization (higher Brannstrom grade).
Predictors of outcome in pediatric epilepsy surgery
TLDR
In this series of pediatric patients, complete resection of the lesion and the electrographically abnormal region was the main determinant of outcome after focal resections.
Focal cortical dysplasia: long term seizure outcome after surgical treatment
TLDR
Surgical treatment of epilepsy with FCD is not only successful in the short term but also has a satisfying long term outcome which remains constant after 3 years of follow-up but is not associated with better employment status or improvement in daily living.
Cortical dysplastic lesions in children with intractable epilepsy: role of complete resection.
TLDR
There was no significant correlation between seizure outcome and data related to seizure characteristics, MR imaging, PET scanning, MEG, location of resection, intracranial video-EEG, postresection ECoG, and histological findings.
Focal cortical dysplasias: surgical outcome in 67 patients in relation to histological subtypes and dual pathology.
TLDR
It is concluded that patients with FCD type 1 and mMCD had a better outcomes compared with those with more severe forms of cortical dysplasia, and a subanalysis of extratemporal FCDs revealed a similar tendency for a better outcome with F CD type 1, suggesting that the histological subtype itself seems to be at least a relevant cofactor influencing postsurgical outcome.
Epilepsy surgery in children with focal cortical dysplasia (FCD): results of long-term seizure outcome.
TLDR
Epilepsy surgery resulted in good seizure control in 60 % of children with intractable epilepsy due to focal cortical dysplasia, and seizure outcome was not significantly different in patients with mild (type I) or balloon cell (type II) FCD.
Surgical treatment of epilepsy due to cortical dysplasia: clinical and EEG findings.
TLDR
Patients with cortical dysplasia who had surgical resection for medically intractable partial epilepsy showed significantly more frequent extratemporal lesions, more frequent non-epileptiform EEG abnormalities and less favourable surgical outcome for seizure control.
...
1
2
3
4
...