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Magnetoencephalography and ictal SPECT in patients with failed epilepsy surgery
Authors:Riёm El Tahry  Z. Irene Wang  Aung Thandar  Irina Podkorytova  Balu Krishnan  Simon Tousseyn  Wu Guiyun  Richard C. Burgess  Andreas V. Alexopoulos
Affiliation:1. Cliniques Universitaires Saint Luc, Av Hippocrate 10, 1200 Brussels, Belgium;2. Cleveland Clinic, Epilepsy Center, Cleveland, OH 44195, USA;3. UTSW, Department of Neurology and Neurotherapeutics, TX 75390, USA;4. Academic Center for Epileptology, Kempenhaeghe and Maastricht UMC+, Heeze, The Netherlands;5. Institute of Neuroscience, Université Catholique de Louvain, Av Mounier 53 & 73, 1200 Brussels, Belgium
Abstract:

Objective

Selected patients with intractable focal epilepsy who have failed a previous epilepsy surgery can become seizure-free with reoperation. Preoperative evaluation is exceedingly challenging in this cohort. We aim to investigate the diagnostic value of two noninvasive approaches, magnetoencephalography (MEG) and ictal single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT), in patients with failed epilepsy surgery.

Methods

We retrospectively included a consecutive cohort of patients who failed prior resective epilepsy surgery, underwent re-evaluation including MEG and ictal SPECT, and had another surgery after the re-evaluation. The relationship between resection and localization from each test was determined, and their association with seizure outcomes was analyzed.

Results

A total of 46 patients were included; 21 (46%) were seizure-free at 1-year followup after reoperation. Twenty-seven (58%) had a positive MEG and 31 (67%) had a positive ictal SPECT. The resection of MEG foci was significantly associated with seizure-free outcome (p?=?0.002). Overlap of ictal SPECT hyperperfusion zones with resection was significantly associated with seizure-free outcome in the subgroup of patients with injection time ≤20?seconds(p?=?0.03), but did not show significant association in the overall cohort (p?=?0.46) although all injections were ictal. Patients whose MEG and ictal SPECT were concordant on a sublobar level had a significantly higher chance of seizure freedom (p?=?0.05).

Conclusions

MEG alone achieved successful localization in patients with failed epilepsy surgery with a statistical significance. Only ictal SPECT with early injection (≤20?seconds) had good localization value. Sublobar concordance between both tests was significantly associated with seizure freedom. SPECT can provide essential information in MEG-negative cases and vice versa.

Significance

Our results emphasize the importance of considering a multimodal presurgical evaluation including MEG and SPECT in all patients with a previous failed epilepsy surgery.
Keywords:Epilepsy  Failed surgery  MEG  SPECT
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