Long-term evaluation of anterior thalamic deep brain stimulation for epilepsy in the European MORE registry.

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Version: Final published version
License: CC BY-NC 4.0
Serval ID
serval:BIB_30773F84A075
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Long-term evaluation of anterior thalamic deep brain stimulation for epilepsy in the European MORE registry.
Journal
Epilepsia
Author(s)
Kaufmann E., Peltola J., Colon A.J., Lehtimäki K., Majtanik M., Mai J.K., Bóné B., Bentes C., Coenen V., Gil-Nagel A., Goncalves-Ferreira A.J., Ryvlin P., Taylor R., Brionne T.C., Gielen F., Song S., Boon P.
Working group(s)
MORE study group
ISSN
1528-1167 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0013-9580
Publication state
Published
Issued date
08/2024
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
65
Number
8
Pages
2438-2458
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article ; Multicenter Study
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Short-term outcomes of deep brain stimulation of the anterior nucleus of the thalamus (ANT-DBS) were reported for people with drug-resistant focal epilepsy (PwE). Because long-term data are still scarce, the Medtronic Registry for Epilepsy (MORE) evaluated clinical routine application of ANT-DBS.
In this multicenter registry, PwE with ANT-DBS were followed up for safety, efficacy, and battery longevity. Follow-up ended after 5 years or upon study closure. Clinical characteristics and stimulation settings were compared between PwE with no benefit, improvers, and responders, that is, PwE with average monthly seizure frequency reduction rates of ≥50%.
Of 170 eligible PwE, 104, 62, and 49 completed the 3-, 4-, and 5-year follow-up, respectively. Most discontinuations (68%) were due to planned study closure as follow-up beyond 2 years was optional. The 5-year follow-up cohort had a median seizure frequency reduction from 16 per month at baseline to 7.9 per month at 5-year follow-up (p < .001), with most-pronounced effects on focal-to-bilateral tonic-clonic seizures (n = 15, 77% reduction, p = .008). At last follow-up (median 3.5 years), 41% (69/170) of PwE were responders. Unifocal epilepsy (p = .035) and a negative history of epilepsy surgery (p = .002) were associated with larger average monthly seizure frequency reductions. Stimulation settings did not differ between response groups. In 179 implanted PwE, DBS-related adverse events (AEs, n = 225) and serious AEs (n = 75) included deterioration in epilepsy or seizure frequency/severity/type (33; 14 serious), memory/cognitive impairment (29; 3 serious), and depression (13; 4 serious). Five deaths occurred (none were ANT-DBS related). Most AEs (76.3%) manifested within the first 2 years after implantation. Activa PC depletion (n = 37) occurred on average after 45 months.
MORE provides further evidence for the long-term application of ANT-DBS in clinical routine practice. Although clinical benefits increased over time, side effects occurred mainly during the first 2 years. Identified outcome modifiers can help inform PwE selection and management.
Keywords
Humans, Deep Brain Stimulation/methods, Deep Brain Stimulation/adverse effects, Female, Registries, Male, Adult, Middle Aged, Anterior Thalamic Nuclei, Drug Resistant Epilepsy/therapy, Treatment Outcome, Europe/epidemiology, Young Adult, Follow-Up Studies, Adolescent, Aged, ANT‐DBS, SANTE, drug‐resistant epilepsy, neuromodulation, neurostimulation, predictor of outcome
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
14/06/2024 12:42
Last modification date
13/08/2024 6:51
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