Abstract

Drug-resistant epilepsy has proved to be associated with an increased standardized mortality ratio (SMR), primarily due to seizure-related fatalities including sudden unexpected death (SUDEP). Recent studies have suggested that the surgical cure of temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) was likely to normalize the SMR of patients suffering from refractory TLE. However, these studies raise a number of methodological issues, which have not always been fully addressed. Some conclusions have relied on previously reported data, indicating a SMR of approximately 5, and a SUDEP incidence of 9/1000 patient-years in drug-resistant epilepsy. In fact, as shown in this review, SMR varied considerably, from 2 to 16, in the various series of patients with refractory epilepsy, whereas the average SUDEP incidence in the same populations was calculated at 3.7/1000 patient-years. Other conclusions were based on the comparison of either surgically and medically treated patients, or cured and non-cured operated patients. In both situations, the two groups included a different proportion of excellent and poor surgical candidates. The biological differences that distinguish these two populations might explain part of the differences observed in their mortality rate, regardless of the effect of surgery. In particular, temporal-plus epilepsies involving the insula, the frontal orbital, or the frontal operculum region, might favour ictal arrhythmias, central apnoea and secondary generalization, which in turn would increase the risk of SUDEP. Future studies are thus warranted to specifically address these issues.

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