ARTICLE
Auteur(s) : Charles E Polkey
Academic Neurosciences Centre Institute of Psychiatry, London,
England
Presented at the International Symposium on Hypothalamic
Hamartoma and Epilepsy, Montreal Neurological Institute, Montreal,
Canada, November 29th 2001.
Hypothalamic hamartoma, as a cause of gelastic epilepsy, was
first described in 1969 [1]. However, it was a difficult lesion to
detect using neuro-imaging, especially when small, and it is only
with the development and application of sophisticated MRI
techniques that these lesions have become more easily recognised,
and therefore interest in their management has increased. Apart
from the surgical approach itself, their management is complex,
requiring consideration of the mode of presentation and the
epileptic syndrome. A study of 140 children with precocious
puberty in India showed that 26 had a neurogenic origin, which was
commoner in boys than girls, although precocious puberty as a whole
was commoner in girls than boys, (4.4:1). Only nine of the
26 children in this group had a hypothalamic hamartoma, the
remainder had other conditions [2]. Patients with hypothalamic
hamartoma and only precocious puberty, were the first patients to
be operated upon with this lesion [3, 4]. Some of the patients with
epilepsy had precocious puberty, and the epilepsy syndromes
themselves vary. Some patients had late onset of a mild partial
epilepsy with gelastic seizures, against a background of normal
intellect and behaviour. In the most severe form, the onset of the
epilepsy is early, often at birth, and although at first there may
be only gelastic seizures the seizure disorder soon broadens with
multiple seizure types, and in addition there is developmental
delay and severe behavioural problems [5]. Nor is hypothalamic
hamartoma the sole cause of gelastic seizures, and therefore it is
necessary to demonstrate the origin of the seizures from the
lesion. Finally, the evolution of the seizure disorder itself may
influence the outcome of surgery.
Problems
The lesion
Demonstration of the lesion is not always easy and may require
careful MRI examination with thin slice volume sequences to
demonstrate small lesions. The lesion does not usually enhance with
gadolinium. They also vary considerably in size and location,
factors that determine the surgical approach. In particular, the
relationship of the lesion to the hypothalamus, the interpeduncular
cistern and the wall of the third ventricle are all important and
need to be demonstrated by the imaging. Angiography may be
necessary, in addition to careful MRI studies, to demonstrate the
relationship between important vascular structures and the lesion,
although these lesions are not hypervascular. The histology of
these lesions is also relevant, they are often not sufficiently
different from the surrounding tissue to allow neuropathologists to
make a positive diagnosis from a smear or frozen section.
Epileptogenicity
StereoEEG recordings have shown that in some cases spikes and
seizure initiation occurs within these lesions [6, 7]. Other
investigators, including ourselves, have found that when an array
of depth electrodes is used to investigate these patients,
including one or more lesional electrodes, the picture can be quite
complex and, to an extent, confusing. The Melbourne group has used
ictal SPECT as a measure of the epileptogenicity of these lesions
[8]. A recent paper has also shown that interictal EEG source
analysis in four cases suggested that the majority of cortical
spikes could be best explained by a deep source in the hamartoma
[9]. The evolution of the syndrome is also important. In many
patients, there are multiple seizure types and bilateral severe EEG
abnormalities. Whether this is the consequence of a severe
epileptic syndrome in the developing brain, or whether these
patients have multiple structural abnormalities, including the
hamartoma, as a cause of their epilepsy syndrome is not clear, and
may not be of practical importance.
Age
Many of the patients, especially those with the more severe
syndromes, present as infants or young children. Therefore, they
have the additional difficulties associated with major intracranial
surgery in this age group.
Approaches
The technical problem
Two technical supports are ‘de rigeur’ in dealing with
these lesions. The first is the use of an operating microscope,
which with improved visualisation of detail and illumination of the
operator’s target, gives the surgeon the best chance of resecting
the lesion. The second, especially important with the longer
approaches, is some form of neuronavigation or frameless stereotaxy
system which will both guide the operator to the lesion and permit
some assessment of the amount of lesion removed. In general, when
these lesions are encountered, they differ in consistency from the
surrounding cerebral tissue and the resection is halted when it is
no longer possible to make this distinction.
The anatomical problem
These lesions vary greatly in their size and location. A
classification, originally proposed by Arita [10], distinguishes
between pedunculated lesions, which hang down into the
interpeduncular cistern, and sessile lesions that are confined to
the hypothalamus. In practice, lesions may present a combination of
these features. It is therefore appropriate to have more than one
approach, although protagonists of each approach, particularly the
transcallosal interforniceal approach, may assert that the majority
of lesions can be dealt with in this way.
The interpeduncular cistern approach
This was the first approach described originally by Northfield
in 1967, [3] and was devised to deal with pedunculated lesions,
which were causing precocious puberty. The approach is through a
temporal craniotomy, going down to the floor of the middle fossa,
and unless the lesion is extremely asymmetric, which is unusual,
from the non-dominant side, usually the right. To obtain more
exposure, it may be justified to remove 1 - 2 cm of the
temporal tip. An extension of access using an orbitocranial
approach has also been described [11].
The advantages of this approach are the relatively short distance
to the lesion and the relative ease of dividing the stalk of the
lesion if it is narrow. The disadvantages are that it is necessary
to manœuvre past a number of important structures including the
internal carotid artery and the optic nerve, chiasm and tracts. The
third nerve also restricts access superiorly. Therefore, if there
is a substantial sessile component within the floor of the third
ventricle it will be impossible to resect it completely from this
approach. If the lesion extends posteriorly, as with one of our
cases, then deep branches from the posterior cerebral and basilar
arteries may be a problem. Even with the assistance of
neuronavigation, if the stalk of the lesion is broad, then it may
be difficult to know when the capsule remote from the operator has
been breached. Therefore, structures which are close to the
capsule, such as the opposite internal carotid artery, are in
danger.
The lamina terminalis approach
It has been known for some time that access to lesions occupying
the wall or floor of the third ventricle could also be obtained
through the lamina terminalis. Through an appropriate craniotomy,
usually on the non-dominant side, the frontal lobe is retracted and
the anterior communicating artery sought by following the
appropriate anterior cerebral artery. The lamina terminalis above
the anterior communicating artery, can be opened without problems,
which then gives access to the floor of the third ventricle. A
significant lesion will usually be visible at this point and can
then be resected [12]. The advantages of this approach are that it
gives good visualisation of the lesion, and once the lamina
terminalis is identified and passed, there are no crucial
structures between the operator and the lesion. The disadvantages
are that considerable retraction is needed resulting in frontal
lobe damage, plus the hazards associated with operating around the
anterior cerebral/anterior communicating complex. The approach is
oblique and access to the more posterior and inferior parts of the
lesion may be limited.
The transcallosal, interforniceal approach
This, the most elegant approach was first described for this
condition by the Melbourne group [8]. Through an appropriate
craniotomy, the operator uses an incision in the trunk of the
corpus callosum to gain access to the lateral ventricle and thence
the foramen of Monro. It is then necessary to enlarge the foramen
by dividing between the fornices to gain access to the third
ventricle and the lesion. The approach is almost vertical; the
advantage is that it has been shown in practice to give access to
all parts of these lesions. The surgeon is able to resect both the
sessile (intrahypothalamic) part of the lesion and also any
extra-hypothalamic component whether within the third ventricle or
protruding inferiorly into the interpeduncular cistern. There are
few disadvantages, but the incision between the fornices can have
cognitive disadvantages.
The disconnection approach
This has been used by Delalande, apparently from a subtemporal
route [13]. The aim is to disconnect the bulk of the lesion from
its connections to the hypothalamus, but not to remove the bulk of
the lesion, thus avoiding risk to the surrounding structures in the
interpeduncular cistern.
These approaches are summarised in figure 1. It must be clear
from these descriptions that the best approach is the
transcallosal, interforniceal approach, but in a minority of cases,
the location of the lesion may indicate that one of the other
approaches may be better.
Outcome
There is a clear difference in outcome and complications,
between patients treated for epilepsy and those treated for
precocious puberty alone. This is, in large part due to the
location of the lesions. Arita et al. classified the lesions
found in 11 children. In seven, they were parahypothalamic,
and these were all patients with only precocious puberty. In the
remaining four cases they were intra-hypothalamic and these were
the cases with the epilepsy syndrome [10]. Similar findings were
reported by Debeneix et al. in an analysis of 19 cases
[14], in six children reported from China [15] and in a mixed group
reported by Mottolese and colleagues in which the patients treated
for precocious puberty did best and had pedunculated lesions [16].
In essence, all the patients treated for precocious puberty had a
good result, with resolution of the syndrome in the majority and a
low complication rate.
There are three substantial series of patients treated with
resection. There is a multicentre study of 13 patients
published by Palmini et al. [7]. All had gelastic, complex
partial and generalised seizures, with drop attacks in eight
patients. Four patients had precocious puberty. All had marked
behavioural and cognitive difficulties. Virtually all of the
lesions had a sessile intra-hypothalamic component. A number of
different surgical approaches were used. In the majority, the
initial approach was by a fronto-temporal craniotomy and pterional
approach. In five patients, a second procedure was required, and in
at least two of these patients it was by a midline frontal approach
via the lamina terminalis. Seizure outcome was assessed with
follow-up periods of 1.5 - 6 years. Two patients were
seizure-free and the remaining 11 patients had all achieved
either freedom from or a 90% reduction in drop attacks and
generalised tonic-clonic seizures. Minor gelastic seizures, complex
partial seizures and atypical absence seizures persisted, although
markedly reduced in frequency, in these 11 patients. Most
patients had a dramatic improvement in behaviour and cognition.
In four patients, there were capsular infarcts, one after a second
surgery, all resolved to leave a minor deficit or no deficit. One
patient had a homonymous field defect after a second operation.
Four patients had a third nerve paresis, all of which recovered.
There was one case of hyperphagia [7].
A French series, initially reported only in abstract, describes
13 patients treated with a combination of resection and
disconnection. The disconnection is primarily through the
interpeduncular cistern. Five patients became Engel 1, seven
patients in class 2 or 3 and one patient in class 4. One
patient had a transient hemiparesis and third nerve palsy, one a
permanent hemiparesis and one an asymptomatic frontal infarct [13].
Follow-up and new patients in this series are reported in this
volume (Fohlen et al. 2003).
The transcallosal interforniceal approach has been used in
Melbourne, and the last report describes 28 patients [17]. All
had intractable epilepsy, with symptomatic generalised epilepsy in
21 cases, gelastic and partial epilepsy in five cases and
gelastic seizures only in two cases. Seizure onset was neonatal in
15 cases. There had been previous surgery to the lesion in
eight cases, radiofrequency lesioning in three cases, gamma knife
surgery in one case. Twelve patients had precocious puberty,
18 intellectual impairment and 19 had a behavioural
disturbance, 12 of whom had autistic traits. In
16 patients, more than 95% of the tumour was resected, in the
remaining 12 patients 25 - 95% of the lesion was resected
with disconnection in 12 patients, near complete in four.
Follow-up of 8-57 months was available for 21 patients.
Fourteen patients were completely seizure-free (67%) and five had a
better than 95% reduction in their seizure frequency (24%). Early
complications included hypernatraemia, somnolence, temperature
instability, small thalamic infarct, low thyroxine, low growth
hormone and anxiety and depression. These all settled with time. In
12 patients, there was appetite stimulation, which remained in
five patients, and short-term memory disturbance in 13 cases,
which persisted to a mild extent in three patients. Results on this
series are updated in this volume (Harvey et al. 2003).
A summary of the seizure outcome from these series and radiosurgery
are presented in table 1.
Table 1. Results of surgery and
gamma knife therapy in the treatment of epilepsy due to
hypothalamic hamartoma
|
Series
|
No
|
1A |
3A + (improved) |
3B – (not improved) |
Complications |
| Rosenfeld (17) |
28 (21) |
14 (67%) |
5 (24%) |
2 (9%) |
5 (24%) |
| Palmini et al. (7) |
13 |
2 (15%) |
11 (85%) |
|
7 (54%) |
| Fohlen et al. (13) |
13 |
5 (38%) |
7 (54%) |
1 (8%) |
3 (23%) |
| Regis et al. (19) |
10 (8) |
4 (25%) |
2 (25%) |
2 (25%) |
1 (10%) |
Notes: figure in brackets indicates the number of patients
available for follow-up. Complications – estimate of the
permanent complications without specifying precisely, includes all
complications mentioned in text.
Discussion
In treating patients with precocious puberty alone, where the
lesions are mostly within the interpeduncular cistern, the
pterional approach seems to give the best result with a high chance
of relieving the endocrine syndrome and with few complications.
Operations directed to targets other than the lesion, such as
temporal lobectomy and callosotomy are recognised to be
unsuccessful. Therefore, the direct approach to the lesion has to
be considered.
The results from the various surgical techniques for treating the
hamartoma directly in patients with epilepsy clearly suggest that
the transcallosal interforniceal approach has the highest success
rate. The complication rate, though not insignificant, is
nevertheless better than that seen with other approaches. This
lower complication rate is probably because it gives excellent
access whilst avoiding major vascular targets with their
accompanying smaller but important branches, in particular the
internal carotid, in some cases the basilar artery and certainly
the anterior cerebral complex. However, it does not explain the
higher seizure relief outcome, especially as in their
2001 abstract, the group explain that seizure outcome is not
related to completeness of removal [18]. Perhaps two or three other
factors may explain the improved result. They were very strict
about demonstrating that the seizures arose from the lesion, using
mostly ictal SPECT, their patients were all in a young age group,
the oldest operated upon was 10 years of age, and they had
observed that patients with generalised seizures did less well
(personal communication). Therefore, it seems reasonable to infer
that except in those cases where such an approach is clearly wrong,
the transcallosal interforniceal approach is to be preferred.
Purely pedunculated interpeduncular lesions are in the minority in
this group of patients. It also seems reasonable to infer that the
earlier this treatment is applied, before the epilepsy syndrome has
diversified, the more likely it is to be successful. This is
particularly apposite because it is clear from all the series that
the other benefits such as improved behaviour, intellectual
performance and quality of life depend upon relief of the seizure
disorder.
The alternative treatments also need to be considered. There are
anecdotal accounts of the use of the gamma knife in the treatment
of these lesions, but Regis has reported a multicentre study of ten
patients [19], the treatment is not easy because, as Regis
observes, the 50% isodose field is constrained by surrounding
structures such as the optic apparatus. In the multicentre study,
ten patients were treated who are comparable in age, symptomatology
etc, with the surgical series already discussed. All the lesions
were sessile; the mean age at treatment was 13.5 years (range
1-32 yrs). There are ten patients, eight of whom are available
for follow-up with a mean of 35 months (range
12-71 months). Four patients were seizure-free, one had rare
nocturnal seizures, one had rare partial seizures and the remaining
two patients had an improvement in seizure control. The only
morbidity was one patient who had poikilothermia. Improvements in
behaviour were also evident. Radiosurgery, at present, does seem to
have a significant effect in these patients, with seizure relief
that is not quite as good as the transcallosal interforniceal
approach, but with fewer complications and without the problems
associated with major intracranial surgery.
This treatment and the alternative described thereafter do not
give the opportunity to establish the nature of the lesion, which
is implicit in the resective surgical approaches, where a specimen
suitable for neuropathological examination is obtained. The MRI
appearance of these lesions is characteristic and static, but in
cases of doubt, a stereotactic biopsy might be appropriate and is
relatively safe.
This raises a final question regarding the size of these lesions.
Although neuronavigation is now extremely accurate, nevertheless
when it comes to finding and removing lesions less than 5 mm
this may be difficult. By contrast, there are accounts of the use
of stereotactic radiofrequency lesioning of these hamartomas [20].
In our own experience, this has been a useful technique in two
patients who were unwilling to undergo major surgery, in one of
whom the lesion was small and mostly in the wall of the third
ventricle.
Conclusions
Hypothalamic hamartoma is the cause of a devastating epilepsy
syndrome, which can be treated by resective surgery.
This surgery is only effective when directed to the lesion
itself.
The best approach is the transcallosal interforniceal approach,
first described by the Melbourne group.
In rare cases, the location of the lesion may favour an
alternative surgical approach.
Radiosurgery using the gamma knife may be a reasonable alternative
in a significant number of cases. n
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