Predictors of therapeutic response following thalamic neuromodulation for drug‐resistant pediatric epilepsy: A systematic review and individual patient data meta‐analysis

Author:

Sharma Akshay12ORCID,Parfyonov Maksim2ORCID,Tiefenbach Jakov3,Hogue Olivia4,Nero Neil5ORCID,Jehi Lara2ORCID,Serletis Demitre12,Bingaman William12,Gupta Ajay2ORCID,Rammo Richard123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurological Surgery Cleveland Clinic Foundation Cleveland Ohio USA

2. Cleveland Clinic Epilepsy Center Cleveland Clinic Foundation Cleveland Ohio USA

3. Center for Neurologic Restoration Cleveland Clinic Foundation Cleveland Ohio USA

4. Department of Quantitative Health Sciences Lerner Research Institute, Cleveland Clinic Foundation Cleveland Ohio USA

5. Education Institute Floyd D. Loop Alumni Library, Cleveland Clinic Cleveland Ohio USA

Abstract

AbstractWe sought to perform a systematic review and individual participant data meta‐analysis to identify predictors of treatment response following thalamic neuromodulation in pediatric patients with medically refractory epilepsy. Electronic databases (MEDLINE, Ovid, Embase, and Cochrane) were searched, with no language or data restriction, to identify studies reporting seizure outcomes in pediatric populations following deep brain stimulation (DBS) or responsive neurostimulation (RNS) implantation in thalamic nuclei. Studies featuring individual participant data of patients with primary or secondary generalized drug‐resistant epilepsy were included. Response to therapy was defined as >50% reduction in seizure frequency from baseline. Of 417 citations, 21 articles reporting on 88 participants were eligible. Mean age at implantation was 13.07 ± 3.49 years. Fifty (57%) patients underwent DBS, and 38 (43%) RNS. Sixty (68%) patients were implanted in centromedian nucleus and 23 (26%) in anterior thalamic nucleus, and five (6%) had both targets implanted. Seventy‐four (84%) patients were implanted bilaterally. The median time to last follow‐up was 12 months (interquartile range = 6.75–26.25). Sixty‐nine percent of patients achieved response to treatment. Age, target, modality, and laterality had no significant association with response in univariate logistic regression. Until thalamic neuromodulation gains widespread approval for use in pediatric patients, data on efficacy will continue to be limited to small retrospective cohorts and case series. The inherent bias of these studies can be overcome by using individual participant data. Thalamic neuromodulation appears to be a safe and effective treatment for epilepsy. Larger, prolonged prospective, multicenter studies are warranted to further evaluate the efficacy of DBS over RNS in this patient population where resection for curative intent is not a safe option.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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