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Blinded study: prospectively defined high frequency oscillations predict seizure outcome in individual patients

Publication date2021
Abstract

Interictal high frequency oscillations are discussed as biomarkers for epileptogenic brain tissue that should be resected in epilepsy surgery to achieve seizure freedom. The prospective classification of tissue sampled by individual electrode contacts remains a challenge. We have developed an automated, prospective definition of clinically relevant high frequency oscillations in intracranial EEG from Montreal and tested it in recordings from Zurich. We here validated the algorithm on intracranial EEG that was recorded in an independent epilepsy centre so that the analysis was blinded to seizure outcome. We selected consecutive patients who underwent resective epilepsy surgery in Geneva with postsurgical follow-up > 12 months. We analysed long-term recordings during sleep that we segmented into intervals of 5 minutes. High frequency oscillations were defined in the ripple (80-250 Hz) and the fast ripple (250-500 Hz) frequency bands. Contacts with the highest rate of ripples co-occurring with fast ripples designated the relevant area. As a validity criterion, we calculated the test-retest reliability of the high frequency oscillations area between the 5 min intervals (dwell time ≥50%). If the area was not fully resected and the patient suffered from recurrent seizures, this was classified as a true positive prediction. We included recordings from 16 patients (median age 32 years, range 18-53 years) with stereotactic depth electrodes and/or with subdural electrode grids (median follow-up 27 months, range 12-55 months). For each patient, we included several 5 min intervals (median 17 intervals). The relevant area had high test-retest reliability across intervals (median dwell time 95%). In two patients, the test-retest reliability was too low (dwell time < 50%) so that outcome prediction was not possible. The area was fully included in the resected volume in 2/4 patients who achieved postoperative seizure freedom (specificity 50%) and was not fully included in 9/10 patients with recurrent seizures (sensitivity 90%), leading to an accuracy of 79%. An additional exploratory analysis suggested that high frequency oscillations were associated with interictal epileptic discharges only in channels within the relevant area and not associated in channels outside the area. We thereby validated the automated procedure to delineate the clinically relevant area in each individual patient of an independently recorded dataset and achieved the same good accuracy as in our previous studies. The reproducibility of our results across datasets is promising for a multicentre study to test the clinical application of high frequency oscillations to guide epilepsy surgery.

Keywords
  • Ripples
  • Fast ripples
  • Automated detection
  • Epilepsy surgery
  • Intracranial EEG
Funding
  • Swiss National Science Foundation - 167836
  • Swiss National Science Foundation - 192749
  • Autre - The collaboration between the members of Université de Genève and Universität Zürich benefitted from joint seed money funding.
Citation (ISO format)
DIMAKOPOULOS, Vasileios et al. Blinded study: prospectively defined high frequency oscillations predict seizure outcome in individual patients. In: Brain Communications, 2021. doi: 10.1093/braincomms/fcab209
Main files (1)
Article (Accepted version)
Identifiers
ISSN of the journal2632-1297
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85downloads

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Creation09/05/2021 9:42:00 AM
First validation09/05/2021 9:42:00 AM
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