Pediatric stereo-electroencephalography: effects of robot assistance and other variables on seizure outcome and complications.


Journal

Journal of neurosurgery. Pediatrics
ISSN: 1933-0715
Titre abrégé: J Neurosurg Pediatr
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 101463759

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
23 Jul 2021
Historique:
received: 25 09 2020
accepted: 19 02 2021
pubmed: 24 7 2021
medline: 12 11 2021
entrez: 23 7 2021
Statut: epublish

Résumé

The safety of stereo-electroencephalography (SEEG) has been investigated; however, most studies have not differentiated pediatric and adult populations, which have different anatomy and physiology. The purpose of this study was to assess SEEG safety in the pediatric setting, focusing on surgical complications and the identification of patient and surgical risk factors, if any. The authors also aimed to determine whether robot assistance in SEEG was associated with a change in practice, surgical parameters, and clinical outcomes. The authors retrospectively studied all SEEG cases performed in their department from December 2014 to March 2020. They analyzed both demographic and surgical variables and noted the types of surgery-related complications and their management. They also studied the clinical outcomes of a subset of the patients in relation to robot-assisted and non-robot-assisted SEEG. Sixty-three children had undergone 64 SEEG procedures. Girls were on average 3 years younger than the boys (mean age 11.1 vs 14.1 years, p < 0.01). The overall complication rate was 6.3%, and the complication rate for patients with left-sided electrodes was higher than that for patients with right-sided electrodes (11.1% vs 3.3%), although the difference between the two groups was not statistically significant. The duration of recording was positively correlated to the number of implanted electrodes (r = 0.296, p < 0.05). Robot assistance was associated with a higher number of implanted electrodes (mean 12.6 vs 7.6 electrodes, p < 0.0001). Robot-assisted implantations were more accurate, with a mean error of 1.51 mm at the target compared to 2.98 mm in nonrobot implantations (p < 0.001). Clinical outcomes were assessed in the first 32 patients treated (16 in the nonrobot group and 16 in the robot group), 23 of whom proceeded to further resective surgery. The children who had undergone robot-assisted SEEG had better eventual seizure control following subsequent epilepsy surgery. Of the children who had undergone resective epilepsy surgery, 42% (5/12) in the nonrobot group and 82% (9/11) in the robot group obtained an Engel class IA outcome at 1 year (χ2 = 3.885, p = 0.049). Based on Kaplan-Meier survival analysis, the robot group had a higher seizure-free rate than the nonrobot group at 30 months postoperation (7/11 vs 2/12, p = 0.063). Two complications, whose causes were attributed to the implantation and head-bandaging steps, required surgical intervention. All complications were either transient or reversible. This is the largest single-center, exclusively pediatric SEEG series that includes robot assistance so far. SEEG complications are uncommon and usually transient or treatable. Robot assistance enabled implantation of more electrodes and improved epilepsy surgery outcomes, as compared to those in the non-robot-assisted cases.

Identifiants

pubmed: 34298516
doi: 10.3171/2021.2.PEDS20810
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

404-415

Auteurs

Ioannis N Mavridis (IN)

Departments of1Neurosurgery.

William B Lo (WB)

Departments of1Neurosurgery.

Sunny Philip (S)

2Neurology, and.

Shakti Agrawal (S)

2Neurology, and.

Caroline Scott (C)

3Neurophysiology, Birmingham Children's Hospital, Birmingham, United Kingdom.

Darren Martin-Lamb (D)

3Neurophysiology, Birmingham Children's Hospital, Birmingham, United Kingdom.

Bryony Carr (B)

3Neurophysiology, Birmingham Children's Hospital, Birmingham, United Kingdom.

Peter Bill (P)

3Neurophysiology, Birmingham Children's Hospital, Birmingham, United Kingdom.

Andrew Lawley (A)

3Neurophysiology, Birmingham Children's Hospital, Birmingham, United Kingdom.

Stefano Seri (S)

3Neurophysiology, Birmingham Children's Hospital, Birmingham, United Kingdom.

A Richard Walsh (AR)

Departments of1Neurosurgery.

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