Literature DB >> 24655096

Chronic unlimited recording electrocorticography-guided resective epilepsy surgery: technology-enabled enhanced fidelity in seizure focus localization with improved surgical efficacy.

Daniel J DiLorenzo1, Erwin Z Mangubat, Marvin A Rossi, Richard W Byrne.   

Abstract

OBJECT: Epilepsy surgery is at the cusp of a transformation due to the convergence of advancements in multiple technologies. Emerging neuromodulatory therapies offer the promise of functionally correcting neural instability and obviating the need for resective or ablative surgery in select cases. Chronic implanted neurological monitoring technology, delivered as part of a neuromodulatory therapeutic device or as a stand-alone monitoring system, offers the potential to monitor patients chronically in their normal ambulatory setting with outpatient medication regimens. This overcomes significant temporal limitations, pharmacological perturbations, and infection risks inherent in the present technology comprising subacute percutaneous inpatient monitoring of presurgical candidates in an epilepsy monitoring unit.
METHODS: As part of the pivotal study for the NeuroPace Responsive Neurostimulation (RNS) System, the authors assessed the efficacy of the RNS System to control seizures in a group of patients with medically refractory epilepsy. Prior to RNS System implantation, these patients were not candidates for further resective surgery because they had temporal lobe epilepsy with bilateral temporal sources, frontal lobe reflex epilepsy with involvement of primary motor cortex, and occipital lobe epilepsy with substantial involvement of eloquent visual cortex. Without interfering with and beyond the scope of the therapeutic aspect of the RNS System study, the authors were able to monitor seizure and epileptiform activity from chronically implanted subdural and depth electrodes in these patients, and, in doing so, they were able to more accurately localize the seizure source. In 5 of these study patients, in whom the RNS System was not effective, the notion of resective surgery was revisited and considered in light of the additional information gleaned from the chronic intracranial recordings obtained from various permutations of electrodes monitoring sources in the frontal, temporal, parietal, and occipital lobes.
RESULTS: Through long-term analysis of chronic unlimited recording electrocorticography (CURE) from chronically implanted electrodes, the authors were able to further refine seizure source localization and sufficiently increase the expected likelihood of seizure control to the extent that 4 patients who had previously been considered not to be candidates for surgery did undergo resective surgery, and all have achieved seizure freedom. A fifth patient, who had a double-band heterotopia, underwent surgery but did not achieve significant seizure reduction.
CONCLUSIONS: Chronic unlimited recording electrocorticography-guided resective epilepsy surgery employs new monitoring technology in a novel way, which in this small series was felt to improve seizure localization and consequently the potential efficacy of resective surgery. This suggests that the CURE modality could improve outcomes in patients who undergo resective surgery, and it may expand the set of patients in whom resective surgery may be expected to be efficacious and therefore the potential number of patients who may achieve seizure freedom. The authors report 4 cases of patients in which this technique and technology had a direct role in guiding surgery that provided seizure freedom and that suggest this new approach warrants further study to characterize its value in presurgical evaluation. Clinical trial no.: NCT00572195 (ClinicalTrials.gov).

Entities:  

Keywords:  AED = antiepileptic drug; CURE = chronic unlimited recording electrocorticography; ECoG = electrocorticographic; EEG = electroencephalography; IPG = implantable pulse generator; MEG = magnetoencephalography; RNS = Responsive Neurostimulation; RUMC = Rush University Medical Center; SISCOM = subtraction ictal SPECT coregistered to MRI; VNS = vagus nerve stimulation; chronic monitoring; epilepsy surgery; intracranial electrodes; intracranial monitoring; seizure focus localization; subdural electrodes

Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 24655096     DOI: 10.3171/2014.1.JNS131592

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosurg        ISSN: 0022-3085            Impact factor:   5.115


  12 in total

1.  Integrating artificial intelligence with real-time intracranial EEG monitoring to automate interictal identification of seizure onset zones in focal epilepsy.

Authors:  Yogatheesan Varatharajah; Brent Berry; Jan Cimbalnik; Vaclav Kremen; Jamie Van Gompel; Matt Stead; Benjamin Brinkmann; Ravishankar Iyer; Gregory Worrell
Journal:  J Neural Eng       Date:  2018-06-01       Impact factor: 5.379

2.  Temporal behavior of seizures and interictal bursts in prolonged intracranial recordings from epileptic canines.

Authors:  Hoameng Ung; Kathryn A Davis; Drausin Wulsin; Joost Wagenaar; Emily Fox; John J McDonnell; Ned Patterson; Charles H Vite; Gregory Worrell; Brian Litt
Journal:  Epilepsia       Date:  2016-11-03       Impact factor: 5.864

3.  Chronic ambulatory electrocorticography from human speech cortex.

Authors:  Vikram R Rao; Matthew K Leonard; Jonathan K Kleen; Ben A Lucas; Emily A Mirro; Edward F Chang
Journal:  Neuroimage       Date:  2017-04-07       Impact factor: 6.556

4.  Intracranial EEG fluctuates over months after implanting electrodes in human brain.

Authors:  Hoameng Ung; Steven N Baldassano; Hank Bink; Abba M Krieger; Shawniqua Williams; Flavia Vitale; Chengyuan Wu; Dean Freestone; Ewan Nurse; Kent Leyde; Kathryn A Davis; Mark Cook; Brian Litt
Journal:  J Neural Eng       Date:  2017-09-01       Impact factor: 5.379

5.  Outcome after individualized stereoelectroencephalography (sEEG) implantation and navigated resection in patients with lesional and non-lesional focal epilepsy.

Authors:  Jun Thorsteinsdottir; Christian Vollmar; Jörg-Christian Tonn; Friedrich-Wilhelm Kreth; Soheyl Noachtar; Aurelia Peraud
Journal:  J Neurol       Date:  2019-01-30       Impact factor: 4.849

Review 6.  A modern epilepsy surgery treatment algorithm: Incorporating traditional and emerging technologies.

Authors:  Dario J Englot
Journal:  Epilepsy Behav       Date:  2018-02-02       Impact factor: 2.937

7.  An Electrocorticography Grid with Conductive Nanoparticles in a Polymer Thick Film on an Organic Substrate Improves CT and MR Imaging.

Authors:  Emad Ahmadi; Husam A Katnani; Laleh Daftari Besheli; Qiang Gu; Reza Atefi; Martin Y Villeneuve; Emad Eskandar; Michael H Lev; Alexandra J Golby; Rajiv Gupta; Giorgio Bonmassar
Journal:  Radiology       Date:  2016-02-03       Impact factor: 11.105

8.  Seizure localization by chronic ambulatory electrocorticography.

Authors:  Alvin Y Chan; Robert C Knowlton; Edward F Chang; Vikram R Rao
Journal:  Clin Neurophysiol Pract       Date:  2018-04-21

9.  Mesial temporal resection following long-term ambulatory intracranial EEG monitoring with a direct brain-responsive neurostimulation system.

Authors:  Lawrence J Hirsch; Emily A Mirro; Vicenta Salanova; Thomas C Witt; Cornelia N Drees; Mesha-Gay Brown; Ricky W Lee; Toni L Sadler; Elizabeth A Felton; Paul Rutecki; Hae Won Shin; Eldad Hadar; Manu Hegde; Vikram R Rao; Lilit Mnatsakanyan; Deepak S Madhavan; Tarek J Zakaria; Anli A Liu; Christianne N Heck; Janet E Greenwood; Jeffrey K Bigelow; Dileep R Nair; Andreas V Alexopoulos; Michael Mackow; Jonathan C Edwards; Nadia Sotudeh; Ruben I Kuzniecky; Ryder P Gwinn; Michael J Doherty; Eric B Geller; Martha J Morrell
Journal:  Epilepsia       Date:  2020-02-18       Impact factor: 5.864

10.  Brain-Responsive Neurostimulation for the treatment of adults with epilepsy in tuberous sclerosis complex: A case series.

Authors:  Danielle S McDermott; Emily A Mirro; Kirsten Fetrow; David E Burdette; Stephanie Chen; Jennifer Hopp; Todd Masel; Emily A Johnson; Felicia M K Elefant; Scheherazade Le; Sanjay E Patra; Mesha-Gay Brown; Zulfi Haneef
Journal:  Epilepsia Open       Date:  2021-03-13
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