Actively Recruiting
Study for the Diagnosis and Treatment of Drug-resistant Focal Epilepsies
Led by Fondazione I.R.C.C.S. Istituto Neurologico Carlo Besta · Updated on 2026-04-01
337
Participants Needed
1
Research Sites
1027 weeks
Total Duration
On this page
AI-Summary
What this Trial Is About
Epilepsy is a clinical condition that affects about fifty million people worldwide, with an estimated occurrence of 16-51 new cases per 100,000 people each year. In 60% of these patients, the origin of seizures is due to a localized (focal) alteration of the brain. In about 25 percent of patients with focal epilepsy, drug treatment is ineffective, a condition defined by the International League Against Epilepsy (ILAE) as drug-resistant epilepsy ; this condition results in a drastic reduction in quality of life associated with psychosocial dysfunction and an increased risk of sudden death. A possible treatment alternative for drug-resistant patients is ablation of the epileptogenic zone through surgical methods that are effective and safe when patients are carefully selected. The percentage of patients with epilepsy who are completely cured after surgery is about 70% for temporal lobe epilepsies, and can be as high as 90% in the case of some brain malformations. Pre-surgical screening and therapeutic intervention (particularly surgery) have health care costs that are amortized over 2-6 years depending on the procedures required before surgery. In the last decade, moreover, the refinement of noninvasive/mini-invasive methods such as radiosurgery, Magnetic Resonance-guided Focused Ultrasound (MRgFUS) and laser interstitial thermal therapy (LiTT) have allowed us to hypothesize a possible specific treatment of drug-resistant patients with epileptogenic areas that are difficult to reach with traditional surgery and patients with complex comorbidities for whom the risks of standard resective surgery would outweigh the possible benefits. Finally, there is a subgroup of patients with drug-resistant epilepsy who cannot undergo ablative surgery. In these patients, seizures originate from multiple areas of the brain (multifocal epilepsy) or the epileptogenic area affects functionally eloquent areas. In these cases, alternative functional treatments are proposed, which aim to decrease the frequency and intensity of seizures and the need for medication, such as: i) application of a vagal stimulator, a pulse generator that is implanted in the chest and connected to the vagus nerve, ii) implantation of deep brain stimulation devices, iii) neuromodulation. Therefore, careful selection of patients during the diagnostic/pre-surgical process is crucial. The multimodal assessments under study, proposed in support of clinical practice, aim to improve such selection by analyzing the causative factors of seizures, the location of the epileptogenic zone, and the clinical-epileptological course of patients who are candidates for surgical or functional treatment of epilepsies.
CONDITIONS
Official Title
Study for the Diagnosis and Treatment of Drug-resistant Focal Epilepsies
Who Can Participate
Eligibility Criteria
You may qualify if you...
- Adult patients with focal epilepsy and a long history of drug-resistant seizures, on one or more antiepileptic medications, with either a known epileptogenic lesion or no lesions seen on brain imaging (cryptogenic).
- Patients with recent onset of focal seizures, on one or more antiepileptic medications with controlled or rare seizures, or patients not yet on antiepileptic therapy who have a neoplastic brain lesion.
You will not qualify if you...
- Patients with uncertain or doubtful epilepsy diagnosis.
- Patients with cognitive or psychiatric disorders that prevent participation in interviews, understanding informed consent, or completing questionnaires.
AI-Screening
AI-Powered Screening
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Trial Site Locations
Total: 1 location
1
Foundation IRCCS Carlo Besta Neurological Institute
Milan, Italy, 20133
Actively Recruiting
Research Team
M
Marco De Curtis, M.D.
CONTACT
R
Roberta Di Giacomo, M.D.
CONTACT
How is the study designed?
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Masking
N/A
Allocation
N/A
Model
N/A
Primary Purpose
N/A
Number of Arms
0
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