4.7 Article

Brain-clinical signatures for vagus nerve stimulation response

Journal

CNS NEUROSCIENCE & THERAPEUTICS
Volume 29, Issue 3, Pages 855-865

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/cns.14021

Keywords

brain-clinical signature; drug-resistant epilepsy; response prediction; vagus nerve stimulation

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This study aimed to explore the correlations of brain-clinical signatures with the clinical phenotype and VNS responsiveness in drug-resistant epilepsy patients. Results showed a higher seizure reduction in the VNS-treated group and abnormal imaging representation was commonly observed in this group. The brain-clinical signature illustrated its clinical potential in predicting the VNS response.
AimVagus nerve stimulation (VNS) is a valuable treatment for drug-resistant epilepsy (DRE) without the indication of surgical resection. The clinical heterogeneity of DRE has limited the optimal indication of choice and diagnosis prediction. The study aimed to explore the correlations of brain-clinical signatures with the clinical phenotype and VNS responsiveness. MethodsA total of 89 DRE patients, including VNS- (n = 44) and drug-treated (n = 45) patients, were retrospectively recruited. The brain-clinical signature consisted of demographic information and brain structural deformations, which were measured using deformation-based morphometry and presented as Jacobian determinant maps. The efficacy and presurgical differences between these two cohorts were compared. Then, the potential of predicting VNS response using brain-clinical signature was investigated according to the different prognosis evaluation approaches. ResultsThe seizure reduction was higher in the VNS-treated group (42.50%) as compared to the drug-treated group (12.09%) (p = 0.11). Abnormal imaging representation, showing encephalomalacia (p(corrected) = 0.03), was commonly observed in the VNS-treated group (p = 0.04). In the patients treated with VNS, the mild/subtle brain abnormalities indicated higher seizure frequency (p = 0.03) and worse VNS response (p = 0.04). The partial least square regression analysis showed a moderate prediction potential of brain-clinical signature for VNS response (p < 0.01). The increase in the pre-VNS seizure frequency and structural etiology could indicate a worse prognosis (higher McHugh classification). ConclusionThe brain-clinical signature illustrated its clinical potential in predicting the VNS response, which might allow clinicians to personalize treatment decisions for DRE patients.

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