Background and purpose: Surgical resection of hypothalamic hamartomas (HHs) associated with drug-resistant gelastic epilepsy carries a considerable risk of neurological and endocrine morbidity. Alternative surgical routes and techniques have therefore been proposed, especially for broadly attached lesions and for those with a third ventricular location.
Methods: We present an updated series of 43 patients (aged nine months to 34 years), operated on from 1998 through 2005 at our institution. The hamartoma was disconnected using a microsurgical pterional approach of those lesions extending from the hypothalamic floor downward into the interpeduncular cistern. When the HH presented as a paramedian mass, partly or exclusively bulging into the third ventricle, with a rather vertical plane of attachment, we chose a frameless stereotactic endoscopic technique to disconnect the lesion. In several of our patients, both methods were applied subsequently.
Results: Surgery-related morbidity was lower with the ventricular endoscopic technique. Twenty-one patients (50%) are seizure-free and two patients (5%) almost seizure-free, while in 17 patients (40%), there was a significant seizure reduction. Two patients (5%) had no postoperative improvement. According to the different topographic features of the HHs, for which we have recently proposed a classification into four subtypes, the intraventricularly located hamartoma had the best prognosis following endoscopic disconnection. Ten of the 12 patients (83%) with this HH location became seizure-free.
Conclusions: Resection of epilepsy-related HHs can be replaced by disconnective procedures. Our results confirm their feasibility and acceptable morbidity, with particularly good seizure outcome in patients with intraventricularly located HHs.