Abstract

ObjectiveTo describe long-term seizure outcomes in patients with IQ < 70 undergoing resective epilepsy surgery and to analyse whether baseline IQ predicts seizure outcome. MethodsPatients undergoing focal resective epilepsy surgery 1995–2017 at age ≥ 4 years were identified in the population-based Swedish National Epilepsy Surgery Register. Two-year, five-year and long-term (10–20-year follow-up) outcomes were analysed. Seizure outcomes of patients with IQ ≥ 70 and IQ < 70 at baseline were compared in the full cohort and between propensity score matched groups. ResultsFollow-up data were available for 884 patients, 79 of whom had IQ < 70. Matched controls were found for 74 of the IQ < 70 patients. Preoperative MRI pathology was unifocal in 54 % and 79 % of IQ < 70 and IQ ≥ 70 patients before matching compared to 58 % and 62 % after matching, respectively. Patients with IQ < 70 achieved significantly worse seizure outcomes at all time points both when analysing the full cohort and the matched groups. After matching, the proportions of seizure-free patients in the IQ < 70 group were 28 %, 32 % and 32 % at the 2-year, 5-year and long-term follow-ups, respectively. Corresponding figures in the IQ ≥ 70 group were 54 %, 62 % and 60 % (p for difference between IQ groups 0.004, 0.002 and 0.049). In the IQ < 70 group, 36 %, 29 % and 45 % had a ≥ 75 % reduction in seizure frequency at the respective three follow-ups. ConclusionLow preoperative IQ predicts lower chances of seizure freedom after resective epilepsy surgery and few patients with IQ < 70 remain completely seizure-free in the long term. Nevertheless, a significant proportion had a reduction in seizure frequency of at least 75 % at long-term follow-up, indicating an important palliative potential of resective surgery for epilepsy patients with intellectual disability.

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