Purpose: We analyzed the short- and long-term effects of adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) therapy for patients with epileptic spasms (ESs) who did not meet the criteria of West syndrome (WS).
Methods: The subjects were 30 patients, including 13 boys and 17 girls, who had received ACTH therapy between 1970 and 2003. We excluded patients with WS, but included those with a history of WS who no longer showed hypsarrhythmia at the period of ACTH therapy. The age at onset of ESs and at ACTH therapy ranged from 2 to 82 months with a median of 18 months, and from 11 to 86 months with a median of 29 months, respectively.
Results: Excellent and poor responses were obtained in 19 (63%) and 11 (37%) patients, respectively, as a short-term effect. Although the patients could be subclassified into five subgroups according to the previous reports, no difference was seen in short- term response to ACTH. Among 17 of the 19 patients with excellent short-term outcomes and a follow-up of >1 year after the ACTH therapy, eight patients have continued to be seizure free (29%; excellent long-term effect), whereas the remaining nine patients had a recurrence of seizures (complex partial seizures, four; generalized tonic seizures, three; ESs, two) at 9 months to 198 months (median, 49 months) after ACTH therapy. In addition, nine of the 17 patients demonstrated a localized frontal EEG focus after the ACTH therapy, although most of these had previously shown diffuse epileptic EEG abnormality.
Conclusions: ACTH therapy is worth trying for patients with resistant ESs, even without features of WS. However, the long-term effect is uncertain because recurrences of various types of seizures, including focal, were frequently observed.