Glioma-associated epilepsy: Toward mechanism-based treatment

Publication date

2017-03-01

Authors

Snijders, T. J.ORCID 0000-0003-0857-081XISNI 000000039373112X
Berendsen, Sharon
Seute, TatjanaORCID 0000-0002-3668-6177
Robe, Pierre AORCID 0000-0001-7845-6196

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Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

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License

taverne

Abstract

Epilepsy is common in glioma patients, and glioma-related epilepsy has a strong impact on patients' quality of life. Glioma-related epilepsy has a unfavorable clinical course when compared to other types of symptomatic epilepsy, with low rates of seizure freedom, common relapses of seizures after seizure-free periods, and a severe outcome in case of intractable seizures (status epilepticus). Translational research is starting to elucidate the specific pathophysiological mechanisms in this disease: the molecular-biological characteristics of the tumor result in metabolic changes in the glioma and the peritumoral region. These changes lead to abnormal neuronal and non-neuronal signaling changes in the tumor's surroundings and in the brain's global functional network ("connectome"). Anti-neoplastic treatments often cause amelioration of epilepsy, possibly by reverting the pathophysiological pro-epileptogenic processes in the tumor. Further research should focus on these pathophysiological mechanisms and on the possibilities for new mechanism-based anti-epileptic treatments. Clinical trials for gliomas should incorporated epilepsy as an outcome measure.

Keywords

Epilepsy, Glioblastoma, Glioma, Pathophysiology, Taverne, Oncology, Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging, Cancer Research

Citation

Snijders, T J, Berendsen, S, Seute, T & Robe, P A 2017, 'Glioma-associated epilepsy : Toward mechanism-based treatment', Translational Cancer Research, vol. 6, pp. S337-S341. https://doi.org/10.21037/tcr.2017.03.03