The course of tumor-related epilepsy in glioblastoma patients: A retrospective analysis.

Purpose

Many patients with glioblastoma suffer from tumor-related seizures. However, there is limited data on the characteristics of tumor-related epilepsy achieving seizure freedom. The aim of this study was to characterize the course of epilepsy in patients with glioblastoma and the factors that influence it.

Methods

We retrospectively analyzed the medical records of glioblastoma patients treated at the University Hospital Erlangen between 01/2006 and 01/2020.

Results

In the final cohort of patients with glioblastoma (n = 520), 292 patients (56.2 %) suffered from tumor-related epilepsy (persons with epilepsy, PWE). Levetiracetam was the most commonly used first-line antiseizure medication (n = 245, 83.9 % of PWE). The onset of epilepsy was preoperative in 154/292 patients (52.7 %). 136 PWE (46.6 %) experienced only one single seizure while 27/292 PWE (9.2 %) developed drug-resistant epilepsy. Status epilepticus occurred in 48/292 patients (16.4 %). Early postoperative onset (within 30 days of surgery) of epilepsy and total gross resection (compared with debulking) were independently associated with a lower risk of further seizures. We did not detect dose-dependent pro- or antiseizure effects of radiochemotherapy.

Conclusion

Tumor-related epilepsy occurred in more than 50% of our cohort, but drug-resistant epilepsy developed in less than 10% of cases. Epilepsy usually started before tumor surgery.

Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Overview publication

TitleThe course of tumor-related epilepsy in glioblastoma patients: A retrospective analysis.
Date2024-09-01
Issue nameEpilepsy & behavior : E&B
Issue numberv158:109919
DOI10.1016/j.yebeh.2024.109919
PubMed38941953
AuthorsStritzelberger J, Gesmann A, Fuhrmann I, Uhl M, Brandner S, Welte TM, Schembs L, Dörfler A, Coras R, Adler W, Schwab S, Putz F, Fietkau R, Distel L & Hamer H
KeywordsGlioblastoma, Radiochemotherapy, Surgery, Tumor-related epilepsy
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