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Epilepsia en el paciente oncológico: prevención primaria e importancia en la selección del paciente de alto riesgo

INTRODUCTION. Epilepsy in cancer patients has a prevalence of 13%, and is especially high in patients with brain tumours, with a higher morbidity and mortality rate compared to non-tumour-related epilepsy. Its physiopathogenic mechanisms are distinct and include distortion of the cortical architectu...

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Autores principales: López-Anguita, Sergio, Gutiérrez-Ruano, Bárbara, Muñoz-González, Adriana, Valenzuela-Rojas, Francisco J., Olmedilla-González, M. Nuria
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Viguera Editores (Evidenze Group) 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10280744/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36440747
http://dx.doi.org/10.33588/rn.7511.2022200
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author López-Anguita, Sergio
Gutiérrez-Ruano, Bárbara
Muñoz-González, Adriana
Valenzuela-Rojas, Francisco J.
Olmedilla-González, M. Nuria
author_facet López-Anguita, Sergio
Gutiérrez-Ruano, Bárbara
Muñoz-González, Adriana
Valenzuela-Rojas, Francisco J.
Olmedilla-González, M. Nuria
author_sort López-Anguita, Sergio
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION. Epilepsy in cancer patients has a prevalence of 13%, and is especially high in patients with brain tumours, with a higher morbidity and mortality rate compared to non-tumour-related epilepsy. Its physiopathogenic mechanisms are distinct and include distortion of the cortical architecture and alteration of the glutamate-enhancing tumoural and peritumoural molecular microenvironment. Nevertheless, there is scarce and inconsistent scientific evidence on some fundamental aspects, such as primary post-operative prophylaxis, the ideal pharmacological profile or the withdrawal time of antiseizure drugs after their release. DEVELOPMENT. Characteristics such as low tumour grade, number/size of cortical lesions, location (frontal, cortical/subcortical or eloquent area), early seizures and molecular alterations, such as IDH1/2 mutation, are factors that favour the occurrence of seizures. Within the treatment, surgery will provide cytoreduction and seizure control by excision of the epileptogenic area, with 75-90% freedom from disabling seizures. Although still a controversial issue, the post-operative use of antiseizure drugs is contraindicated by the main scientific societies due to the scarce evidence and the wide spectrum of side effects. However, they are frequently used in daily clinical practice. CONCLUSIONS. All this forces us to establish a group of patients at ‘high risk’ of postoperative seizures, who will need to select the ideal antiseizure drug for primary prevention, with a route of administration that facilitates a rapid action effect and pharmacokinetics that prevents hepatic metabolism and CYP450 induction to achieve a lower number of interactions with chemotherapy, corticosteroids and radiotherapy. Despite this, drug resistance rates of 20-40% and relapse rates of 25-29% have been reported.
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spelling pubmed-102807442023-06-21 Epilepsia en el paciente oncológico: prevención primaria e importancia en la selección del paciente de alto riesgo López-Anguita, Sergio Gutiérrez-Ruano, Bárbara Muñoz-González, Adriana Valenzuela-Rojas, Francisco J. Olmedilla-González, M. Nuria Rev Neurol Revisión INTRODUCTION. Epilepsy in cancer patients has a prevalence of 13%, and is especially high in patients with brain tumours, with a higher morbidity and mortality rate compared to non-tumour-related epilepsy. Its physiopathogenic mechanisms are distinct and include distortion of the cortical architecture and alteration of the glutamate-enhancing tumoural and peritumoural molecular microenvironment. Nevertheless, there is scarce and inconsistent scientific evidence on some fundamental aspects, such as primary post-operative prophylaxis, the ideal pharmacological profile or the withdrawal time of antiseizure drugs after their release. DEVELOPMENT. Characteristics such as low tumour grade, number/size of cortical lesions, location (frontal, cortical/subcortical or eloquent area), early seizures and molecular alterations, such as IDH1/2 mutation, are factors that favour the occurrence of seizures. Within the treatment, surgery will provide cytoreduction and seizure control by excision of the epileptogenic area, with 75-90% freedom from disabling seizures. Although still a controversial issue, the post-operative use of antiseizure drugs is contraindicated by the main scientific societies due to the scarce evidence and the wide spectrum of side effects. However, they are frequently used in daily clinical practice. CONCLUSIONS. All this forces us to establish a group of patients at ‘high risk’ of postoperative seizures, who will need to select the ideal antiseizure drug for primary prevention, with a route of administration that facilitates a rapid action effect and pharmacokinetics that prevents hepatic metabolism and CYP450 induction to achieve a lower number of interactions with chemotherapy, corticosteroids and radiotherapy. Despite this, drug resistance rates of 20-40% and relapse rates of 25-29% have been reported. Viguera Editores (Evidenze Group) 2022-12-01 /pmc/articles/PMC10280744/ /pubmed/36440747 http://dx.doi.org/10.33588/rn.7511.2022200 Text en Copyright: © Revista de Neurología https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/Revista de Neurología trabaja bajo una licencia Creative Commons
spellingShingle Revisión
López-Anguita, Sergio
Gutiérrez-Ruano, Bárbara
Muñoz-González, Adriana
Valenzuela-Rojas, Francisco J.
Olmedilla-González, M. Nuria
Epilepsia en el paciente oncológico: prevención primaria e importancia en la selección del paciente de alto riesgo
title Epilepsia en el paciente oncológico: prevención primaria e importancia en la selección del paciente de alto riesgo
title_full Epilepsia en el paciente oncológico: prevención primaria e importancia en la selección del paciente de alto riesgo
title_fullStr Epilepsia en el paciente oncológico: prevención primaria e importancia en la selección del paciente de alto riesgo
title_full_unstemmed Epilepsia en el paciente oncológico: prevención primaria e importancia en la selección del paciente de alto riesgo
title_short Epilepsia en el paciente oncológico: prevención primaria e importancia en la selección del paciente de alto riesgo
title_sort epilepsia en el paciente oncológico: prevención primaria e importancia en la selección del paciente de alto riesgo
topic Revisión
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10280744/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36440747
http://dx.doi.org/10.33588/rn.7511.2022200
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