The lifetime risk of having epileptic seizures is profoundly increased in patients with cancer: about 20% of all patients with systemic cancer may develop brain metastases. These patients and those with primary brain tumours have a lifetime risk of epilepsy of 20-80%. Moreover, exposure to chemotherapy or radiotherapy to the brain, cancer-related metabolic disturbances, stroke, and infection can provoke seizures. The management of epilepsy in patients with cancer includes diagnosis and treatment of the underlying cerebral pathological changes, secondary prophylaxis with antiepileptic drugs, and limiting of the effect of epilepsy and its treatment on the efficacy and tolerability of anticancer treatments, cognitive function, and quality of life. Because of the concern of drug-drug interactions, the pharmacological approach to epilepsy requires a multidisciplinary approach, specifically in a setting of rapidly increasing choices of agents both to treat cancer and cancer-associated epilepsy. GABA, -aminobutyric acid; HDAC, histone deacetylase; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; SV2A, synaptic vesicle 2A.
Contributor statementMW prepared the first draft of the manuscript. RS and WW reviewed and revised the manuscript. All authors approved the final version of the manuscript.
Search Strategy and Selection Criteria sectionData for this review were identified by searches of PubMed. References from relevant articles using the search terms "epilepsy, brain tumor, review", which revealed 881 citations, "epilepsy brain tumor chemotherapy" (753 citations), "epilepsy, drug interactions, tumor" (114 citations), "partial epilepsy randomized controlled trial" (614 citations) and "prognostic factors epilepsy glioma" (30 citations) were considered.Articles were also identified through searches of the authors` own files. Only papers in English were reviewed. Data from controlled trials were regarded superior to data from uncontrolled series and the newest article was chosen, if multiple references to a similar topic were available. One abstract was included for novelty reasons. The final reference list was generated on the basis of originality and relevance to the broad scope of this review.
SUMMARYThe lifetime risk of suffering epileptic seizures is profoundly increased in cancer patients: approximately 20% of all patients with systemic cancer may develop brain metastases.These patients as well as patients with primary brain tumors carry a lifetime risk of epilepsy in the range of 20-80%. Moreover, exposure to chemo-or radiotherapy to the brain as well as cancer-related metabolic disturbances, stroke and infection may provoke seizures. The management of epilepsy in cancer patients includes (i) diagnosis and treatment of the underlying cerebral pathology, (ii) secondary prophylaxis using antiepileptic drugs, and (iii) limiting the impact of epilepsy and its treatment on the efficacy and tolerability of anti-cancer treatments, cognitive function and quality of life.Because of the specific concern of drug drug interactions,...