4.3 Article

Impact of high-density EEG in presurgical evaluation for refractory epilepsy patients

Journal

CLINICAL NEUROLOGY AND NEUROSURGERY
Volume 219, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.clineuro.2022.107336

Keywords

Epilepsy; Electroencephalogram; High density EEG; Surgery; Presurgical evaluation

Funding

  1. Maslah Saul MD Chair
  2. James and Carrie Anderson Epilepsy Fund
  3. Steve Chen Epilepsy Research Fund

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High-density EEG (HD-EEG) assists in presurgical planning for refractory epilepsy patients, with a higher yield in patients with non-lesional MRIs. The concordance of HD-EEG dipole analysis localization and resection site is a favorable outcome indicator.
Objective: Electrical source localization (ESI) can help to identify the seizure onset zone or propagation zone, but it is unclear how dipole localization techniques influence surgical planning. Methods: Patients who received a high density (HD)-EEG from 7/2014-7/2019 at Stanford were included if they met the following inclusion criteria: (1) adequate epileptiform discharges were recorded for source localization analysis, (2) underwent surgical treatment, which was at least 6 months before the survey. Interictal ESI was performed with the LORETA method on age matched MRIs. Six neurophysiologists from the Stanford Epilepsy Program independently reviewed each case through an HIPPA-protected online survey. The same cases were presented again with additional data from the HD-EEG study. Ratings of how much the HD-EEG findings added value and in what way were recorded. Results: Fifty out of 202 patients met the inclusion criteria, providing a total of 276 h of HDEEG recordings. All patients had video EEG recordings and at least one brain MRI, 88 % had neuropsychological testing, 78 % had either a PET or SPECT scan. Additional HD-EEG information was rated as helpful in 83.8 %, not useful in 14.4 % and misleading in 1.8 % of cases. In 20.4 % of cases the HD-EEG information altered decision-making in a major way, such as choosing a different surgical procedure, avoidance of invasive recording or suggesting placement of invasive electrodes in a lobe not previously planned. In 21.5 % of cases, HD-EEG changed the plan in a minor way, e.g., extra invasive electrodes near the previously planned sites in the same sub-lobar region. In 42.3 % cases, HD-EEG did not change their plan but provided confirmation. In cases with normal MRI, additional HD EEG information was more likely to change physicians' decision making during presurgical process when compared to the cases with MRI-visible lesions (53.3 % vs. 34.3 %, p = 0.002). Among patients achieving Engel class I/II outcome, the concordance rate of HD-EEG and resection zone was 64.7 % versus 35.3 % with class III/ IV (p = 0.028). Conclusion: HD-EEG assists presurgical planning for refractory epilepsy patients, with a higher yield in patients with non-lesional MRIs. Concordance of HD-EEG dipole analysis localization and resection site is a favorable outcome indicator.

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