One million epilepsy patients in China missing out on beneficial surgery
In 2010, Professor Patrick Kwan from Monash University’s Department of Neuroscience, led an international team researching the causes and outcomes of epilepsy in rural China.
A decade later, the results indicate that at least one million Chinese people with epilepsy could be candidates for a standard operation that may leave them seizure-free.
The study, published in Neurology, incorporated 600 epilepsy patients from across four rural provinces in China from July 2010 and December 2012, with each participant undergoing an MRI and other tests looking for abnormalities in brain imaging. Of those, 108 were found to have lesions that could potentially be cured by surgery.
“In a best-case scenario, around 70 percent to 80 percent of them would be seizure-free—often after enduring seizures uncontrolled by medications for 20 years or more,” Professor Kwan said.
The participants were assessed by local primary care doctors trained by provincial neurologists in main hospitals to use a standardized questionnaire and take patient histories. The patients then traveled to provincial centers to have tests including MRIs and blood taken, for use in later research into genetic causes for epilepsy.
Professor Kwan said those patients identified as potential surgery candidates would need to undergo further tests including video-EEGs and neuropsychological assessments to ensure surgery would be effective, with the actual operation only taking three to four hours.
The same standard operation is carried out for suitable patients routinely around the world including Australia, UK and US.
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