Litcius/Paper detail

Yield of non-invasive imaging in MRI-negative focal epilepsy

C. Czarnetzki, Laurent Spinelli, Hans‐Jürgen Huppertz, Karl Schaller, Shahan Momjian, Johannes Alexander Lobrinus, María Isabel Vargas, Valentina Garibotto, Serge Vulliémoz, Margitta Seeck

2023Journal of Neurology23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The absence of MRI-lesion reduces considerably the probability of having an excellent outcome (International League Against Epilepsies [ILAE] class I-II) after epilepsy surgery. Surgical success in magnetic-resonance imaging (MRI)-negative cases relies therefore mainly on non-invasive techniques such as positron-emission tomography (PET), subtraction ictal/inter-ictal single-photon-emission-computed-tomography co-registered to MRI (SISCOM), electric source imaging (ESI) and morphometric MRI analysis (MAP). We were interested in identifying the optimal imaging technique or combination to achieve post-operative class I-II in patients with MRI-negative focal epilepsy. METHODS: We identified 168 epileptic patients without MRI lesion. Thirty-three (19.6%) were diagnosed with unifocal epilepsy, underwent surgical resection and follow-up ⩾ 2 years. Sensitivity, specificity, predictive values, and diagnostic odds ratio (OR) were calculated for each technique individually and in combination (after co-registration). RESULTS: 23/33 (70%) were free of disabling seizures (75.0% with temporal and 61.5% extratemporal lobe epilepsy). None of the individual modalities presented an OR > 1.5, except ESI if only patients with interictal epileptiform discharges (IEDs) were considered (OR 3.2). On a dual combination, SISCOM with ESI presented the highest outcome (OR = 6). MAP contributed to detecting indistinguishable focal cortical dysplasia in particular in extratemporal epilepsies with a sensitivity of 75%. Concordance of PET, ESI on interictal epileptic discharges, and SISCOM was associated with the highest chance for post-operative seizure control (OR = 11). CONCLUSION: If MRI is negative, the chances to benefit from epilepsy surgery are almost as high as in lesional epilepsy, provided that multiple established non-invasive imaging tools are rigorously applied and co-registered together.

Topics & Concepts

IctalCortical dysplasiaIctal-Interictal SPECT Analysis by SPMMagnetic resonance imagingEpilepsyEpilepsy surgeryMedicineNeuroradiologyTemporal lobeRadiologyNuclear medicinePositron emission tomographyConcordanceEmission computed tomographyNeurologyInternal medicinePsychiatryEpilepsy research and treatmentAdvanced MRI Techniques and ApplicationsFunctional Brain Connectivity Studies