Radiofrekwencyjna termokoagulacja przez wiele elektrod pod kontrolą stereo-elektroencefalografii w ogniskowej epilepsji: przegląd obecnych metod i wyników leczenia

PubMedEpilepsia

Stereo-electroencephalography-guided cross-electrode radiofrequency thermocoagulation in focal epilepsy: A review of current methodologies and outcomes

W skrócie

Badanie analizuje nową metodę leczenia epilepsji, w której lekarze używają specjalnych elektrod do precyzyjnego niszczenia ognisk padaczki za pomocą ciepła. Metoda ta daje dobre wyniki - u 71% pacjentów udało się całkowicie wyeliminować napady, szczególnie gdy przyczyną były zmany w podwzgórzu lub hippocampusie. Leczenie jest stosunkowo bezpieczne, choć brakuje jeszcze badań nad jego długoterminowymi skutkami dla pamięci i zdrowia psychicznego pacjentów.

Oryginalny abstract (angielski)

Advances in stereo-electroencephalography-guided radiofrequency thermocoagulation (SEEG-guided RFTC) have led to the development of cross-electrode RFTC, which has been shown to result in significantly larger lesions and higher seizure-freedom rates compared to standard RFTC methods. Given the novelty of cross-electrode RFTC, herein we review the reported surgical techniques and treatment-related outcomes to date to identify current research gaps and future directions. Ten articles were identified for review including 187 participants who underwent cross-electrode RFTC. Hypothalamic hamartoma (HH) and hippocampal sclerosis (HS) accounted for 52% and 26% of all cases, respectively. The proportion of cases with seizure freedom at last follow-up was 71%, including 84% of the HH cases, 54% of all temporal lobe cases, and 56% of the HS cases. Long-term efficacy in one HS study dropped from 72% at 12 months to 43% at 5 years post-treatment. Most (94%) reported complications resolved. One study reported favorable neuropsychological outcomes in HS cross-electrode RFTC compared to standard resective epilepsy surgery; however, it did not use memory tasks known to be reliable proximal markers of mesial temporal dysfunction/disease. In conclusion, extending RFTC boundaries through cross-electrode methods may improve RFTC efficacy and produce seizure-freedom rates comparable to established epilepsy surgical interventions in the treatment of HH and HS at 12 months, with a low risk of postoperative complications. There is limited research exploring efficacy in non-lesional epilepsy despite these cases often undergoing SEEG for diagnostic purposes and being well placed for cross-electrode RFTC. In addition, there is a lack of research exploring the neurocognitive and psychiatric risks of cross-electrode RFTC.

Metadane publikacji

Journal
Epilepsia
Data publikacji
07.05.2026
PMID
42095980
DOI
10.1002/epi.70261
Autorzy
Campbell B, Neal A, Cockle E, Rayner G, Alpitsis R, Blomfield E, O'Brien TJ, Gutman M, Laing J, Hunn M
Słowa kluczowe
SEEG, conformal radiofrequency thermocoagulation, cross‐bonding, epilepsy surgery, optimized radiofrequency thermocoagulation, three‐dimensional radiofrequency thermocoagulation
Źródło
PubMed