Safety for children

Background : Surgical resection of epileptic foci relies on accurate localization of the epileptogenic zone, often achieved by subdural and depth electrodes. Our epilepsy center has treated selected children with poorly localized medically refractory epilepsy with a staged surgical protocol, with at least one phase of invasive monitoring for localization and resection of epileptic foci. Objective : To evaluate the safety of staged surgical treatments for refractory epilepsy among children. Methods : Data were retrospectively collected, including surgical details and complications of all patients who underwent invasive monitoring. Results : 161 children underwent 200 admissions including staged procedures (>1 surgery during one hospital admission), and 496 total surgeries. Average age at surgery was 7y (8m-16.5y). 250 surgeries included resections (and invasive monitoring), and 189 involved electrode placement only. Cumulative total number of surgeries per patient was 2-10 (average 3). Average duration of monitoring was 10 days (1-30). There were no deaths. Follow-up ranged from 1m to 10y. Major complications included unexpected new permanent mild neurological deficits (2%/admission), CNS or bone flap infections (1.5%/admission), intracranial hemorrhage, CSF leak, and a retained strip (each 0.5%/admission). Minor complications included bone absorption (5%/admission), positive surveillance sub/epidural cultures in asymptomatic patients (5.5%/admission), non-infectious fever (5%/admission), and wound complications (3%/admission). 30 complications necessitated additional surgical treatment. Conclusion : Staged epilepsy surgery, with invasive electrode monitoring, is safe in children with poorly localized medically refractory epilepsy. The rate of major complications is low, and appears comparable to that associated with other elective neurosurgical procedures.