Long‐term evaluation of anterior thalamic deep brain stimulation for epilepsy in the European MORE registry (original) (raw)

Kaufmann, E. et al. (2024) Long‐term evaluation of anterior thalamic deep brain stimulation for epilepsy in the European MORE registry.Epilepsia, 65(8), pp. 2438-2458. (doi: 10.1111/epi.18003) (PMID:38837755)

Abstract

Objective: Short‐term outcomes of deep brain stimulation of the anterior nucleus of the thalamus (ANT‐DBS) were reported for people with drug‐resistant focal epilepsy (PwE). Because long‐term data are still scarce, the Medtronic Registry for Epilepsy (MORE) evaluated clinical routine application of ANT‐DBS. Methods: In this multicenter registry, PwE with ANT‐DBS were followed up for safety, efficacy, and battery longevity. Follow‐up ended after 5 years or upon study closure. Clinical characteristics and stimulation settings were compared between PwE with no benefit, improvers, and responders, that is, PwE with average monthly seizure frequency reduction rates of ≥50%. Results: Of 170 eligible PwE, 104, 62, and 49 completed the 3‐, 4‐, and 5‐year follow‐up, respectively. Most discontinuations (68%) were due to planned study closure as follow‐up beyond 2 years was optional. The 5‐year follow‐up cohort had a median seizure frequency reduction from 16 per month at baseline to 7.9 per month at 5‐year follow‐up (p < .001), with most‐pronounced effects on focal‐to‐bilateral tonic–clonic seizures (n = 15, 77% reduction, p = .008). At last follow‐up (median 3.5 years), 41% (69/170) of PwE were responders. Unifocal epilepsy (p = .035) and a negative history of epilepsy surgery (p = .002) were associated with larger average monthly seizure frequency reductions. Stimulation settings did not differ between response groups. In 179 implanted PwE, DBS‐related adverse events (AEs, n = 225) and serious AEs (n = 75) included deterioration in epilepsy or seizure frequency/severity/type (33; 14 serious), memory/cognitive impairment (29; 3 serious), and depression (13; 4 serious). Five deaths occurred (none were ANT‐DBS related). Most AEs (76.3%) manifested within the first 2 years after implantation. Activa PC depletion (n = 37) occurred on average after 45 months. Significance: MORE provides further evidence for the long‐term application of ANT‐DBS in clinical routine practice. Although clinical benefits increased over time, side effects occurred mainly during the first 2 years. Identified outcome modifiers can help inform PwE selection and management.

Item Type: Articles
Additional Information: MORE was sponsored by Medtronic, plc.
Status: Published
Refereed: Yes
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID: Taylor, Professor Rod
Authors: Kaufmann, E., Peltola, J., Colon, A. J., Lehtimäki, K., Majtanik, M., Mai, J. K., Bóné, B., Bentes, C., Coenen, V., Gil‐Nagel, A., Goncalves‐Ferreira, A. J., Ryvlin, P., Taylor, R., Brionne, T. C., Gielen, F., Song, S., Boon, P., and the MORE study group,
College/School: College of Medical Veterinary and Life Sciences > School of Health & Wellbeing > MRC/CSO SPHSU
Journal Name: Epilepsia
Publisher: Wiley
ISSN: 0013-9580
ISSN (Online): 1528-1167
Published Online: 05 June 2024
Copyright Holders: Copyright © 2024 Medtronic and The Author(s)
First Published: First published in Epilepsia 65(8):2438-2458
Publisher Policy: Reproduced under a Creative Commons licence

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Deposit and Record Details

ID Code: 327660
Depositing User: Publications Router
Datestamp: 05 Sep 2024 10:02
Last Modified: 22 Jan 2025 15:30
Date of acceptance: 25 April 2024
Date of first online publication: 5 June 2024
Date Deposited: 5 September 2024
Data Availability Statement: No