Use of gamma-delta modulation index to predict and measure response to treatment for infantile spasms
Abstract number :
497
Submission category :
3. Neurophysiology / 3G. Computational Analysis & Modeling of EEG
Year :
2020
Submission ID :
2422839
Source :
www.aesnet.org
Presentation date :
12/6/2020 5:16:48 PM
Published date :
Nov 21, 2020, 02:24 AM
Authors :
Rajsekar Rajaraman, University of California Los Angeles; Hiroki Nariai - University of California Los Angeles Mattel Children's Hospital; Makoto Miyakoshi - UCSD; Danilo Bernardo - UCSF; Daniel Shrey - CHOC Children's; Beth Lopour - UCI; Shaun A. Hussain
Rationale:
Infantile spasms (IS) is characterized by epileptic spasms, hypsarrhythmia (including variants thereof), and neurodevelopmental impairment. With the observation that interictal paroxysmal fast activity (PFA) seems to be a common feature in children with infantile spasms, we set out to evaluate a computational method to identify and quantify PFA in an unbiased fashion, and use these PFA measures to predict and measure response to treatment for infantile spasms.
Method:
We identified 50 patients with IS, with (1) baseline overnight EEG, (2) subsequent treatment with a first-line therapy (prednisolone, ACTH, or vigabatrin), and (3) follow-up overnight EEG within 1 month. Thereafter, each pre- and post-treatment EEG was sampled four times (2 awake, 2 sleep) with specific samples selected using a randomization algorithm to mitigate sample selection bias. Artifactual EEG was then excluded using a fully-automated, principal components analysis-based algorithm. Thereafter, we calculated the strength of cross-frequency coupling between gamma (35-70 Hz) and delta (3-4 Hz) activity measured as the modulation index (MI) in wakefulness and sleep for each patient, before and after treatment. MI for each EEG sample was determined using the mean MI across all EEG channels and MI for each assessment (before or after treatment) was defined as the mean of the two samples (awake or asleep). We then contrasted awake and sleep MI between responders (resolution of epileptic spasms without relapse over the next 28 days) and non-responders (all others).
Results:
Among the 50 patients, there were 28 (56%) clinical responders and 22 (44%) non-responders. As we have previously reported, baseline hypsarrhythmia did not predict response. At baseline (pre-treatment), there was a trend such that responders exhibited lower median MI than non-responders during both wakefulness (P = 0.097) and sleep (P = 0.046). After-treatment, responders exhibited lower MI in sleep (P < 0.001) and tended to exhibit lower MI during wakefulness (P = 0.053), compared to non-responders (Fig. 1). Of note, treatment was associated with consistent reduction in MI during both wakefulness (P = 0.006) and sleep (P < 0.001) for all patients, regardless of whether they achieved complete response.
Conclusion:
This study suggests that post-treatment MI is a reliable indicator of short-term response to treatment for infantile spasms, and that baseline MI may predict response. Further study is needed to validate these findings and evaluate this novel EEG metric against other clinical and computational EEG measures.
Funding:
:This study was accomplished with support from the Susan S. Spencer Clinical Research Training Scholarship from the American Academy of Neurology, the Pediatric Victory Foundation, the Sudha Neelakantan & Venky Harinarayan Charitable Fund, the Elsie and Isaac Fogelman Endowment, the Mohammed F. Alibrahim Endowment, the Hughes Family Foundation, the John C. Hench Foundation, the University of California Los Angeles Children’s Discovery and Innovation Institute, and UCB Biopharma.
Neurophysiology