Epilepsy & Behavior | 2021
Psychiatric outcome of temporal lobe epilepsy surgery: A prospective, 2-year follow-up study
Abstract
OBJECTIVE\nWe performed a prospective, longitudinal, 2-year follow-up study to clarify psychiatric courses and outcomes after temporal lobe epilepsy surgery.\n\n\nMETHODS\nWe assessed 141 patients (68 men, 73 women) aged 16 or older with structured interviews and psychiatric rating scales before surgery and 3\u202fmonths, 1\u202fyear, and 2\u202fyears afterward.\n\n\nRESULTS\nFifty-two patients (36.9%) had a psychiatric condition before surgery or during the follow-up period or both. The number of patients with a psychiatric condition decreased from 31 (22.0%) before surgery to 14 (9.9%) at 2\u202fyears. On the basis of our results, we defined 5 courses of psychiatric conditions: course 0, no psychopathology (n\u202f=\u202f89, 63.1%); course 1, remission or resolution of a presurgical psychiatric condition after surgery (n\u202f=\u202f19, 13.5%); course 2, new onset, transient psychiatric condition after surgery (n\u202f=\u202f19, 13.5%); course 3, new onset, persistent psychiatric condition after surgery (n\u202f=\u202f2, 1.4%); and course 4, chronic psychiatric condition before and after surgery (n\u202f=\u202f12, 8.5%). In 14/25 (56.0%) patients with a mood or anxiety disorder before surgery, the condition remitted or resolved after surgery (course 1). Eighteen of 110 patients (16.4%) without any psychopathology before surgery developed mood or anxiety disorders afterward, including major depressive disorder in 13 patients (courses 2 and 3); in more than half of these patients, the disorder manifested within 1\u202fyear. More patients with a past history of psychiatric conditions were found in course 2 than in course 0. The duration of epilepsy was longer in course 4 than in course 0, and age at epilepsy onset was lower in course 4 than in course 0.\n\n\nSIGNIFICANCE\nMost patients with a psychiatric condition show a favorable outcome 2\u202fyears after surgery; however, some show a transient worsening or new onset of psychiatric conditions, in particular depression.