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MEG abnormalities and mechanisms of surgical failure in neocortical epilepsy
Authors:Thomas W. Owen  Gabrielle M. Schroeder  Vytene Janiukstyte  Gerard R. Hall  Andrew McEvoy  Anna Miserocchi  Jane de Tisi  John S. Duncan  Fergus Rugg-Gunn  Yujiang Wang  Peter N. Taylor
Affiliation:1. Computational Neurology, Neuroscience & Psychiatry Lab, ICOS Group, School of Computing, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK;2. UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology, London, UK;3. Computational Neurology, Neuroscience & Psychiatry Lab, ICOS Group, School of Computing, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK

UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology, London, UK

Faculty of Medical Sciences, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK

Abstract:

Objective

Epilepsy surgery fails to achieve seizure freedom in 30%–40% of cases. It is not fully understood why some surgeries are unsuccessful. By comparing interictal magnetoencephalography (MEG) band power from patient data to normative maps, which describe healthy spatial and population variability, we identify patient-specific abnormalities relating to surgical failure. We propose three mechanisms contributing to poor surgical outcome: (1) not resecting the epileptogenic abnormalities (mislocalization), (2) failing to remove all epileptogenic abnormalities (partial resection), and (3) insufficiently impacting the overall cortical abnormality. Herein we develop markers of these mechanisms, validating them against patient outcomes.

Methods

Resting-state MEG recordings were acquired for 70 healthy controls and 32 patients with refractory neocortical epilepsy. Relative band-power spatial maps were computed using source-localized recordings. Patient and region-specific band-power abnormalities were estimated as the maximum absolute z-score across five frequency bands using healthy data as a baseline. Resected regions were identified using postoperative magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). We hypothesized that our mechanistically interpretable markers would discriminate patients with and without postoperative seizure freedom.

Results

Our markers discriminated surgical outcome groups (abnormalities not targeted: area under the curve [AUC] = 0.80, p = .003; partial resection of epileptogenic zone: AUC = 0.68, p = .053; and insufficient cortical abnormality impact: AUC = 0.64, p = .096). Furthermore, 95% of those patients who were not seizure-free had markers of surgical failure for at least one of the three proposed mechanisms. In contrast, of those patients without markers for any mechanism, 80% were ultimately seizure-free.

Significance

The mapping of abnormalities across the brain is important for a wide range of neurological conditions. Here we have demonstrated that interictal MEG band-power mapping has merit for the localization of pathology and improving our mechanistic understanding of epilepsy. Our markers for mechanisms of surgical failure could be used in the future to construct predictive models of surgical outcome, aiding clinical teams during patient pre-surgical evaluations.
Keywords:MEG  abnormality mapping  epilepsy surgery  neocortical epilepsy
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