Volume 19, Issue 1 pp. 40-48
Original articles

Coregistration of multimodal imaging is associated with favourable two-year seizure outcome after paediatric epilepsy surgery*

Michael Scott Perry

Corresponding Author

Michael Scott Perry

The Jane and John Justin Neuroscience Center, Comprehensive Epilepsy Program, Cook Children's Medical Center, Fort Worth, Texas

Correspondence: Michael Scott Perry Comprehensive Epilepsy Center, Cook Children's Medical Center, 1500 Cooper Street, 4th Floor, Fort Worth, TX 76104, USA <[email protected]>Search for more papers by this author
Laurie Bailey

Laurie Bailey

The Jane and John Justin Neuroscience Center, Comprehensive Epilepsy Program, Cook Children's Medical Center, Fort Worth, Texas

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Daniel Freedman

Daniel Freedman

University of North Texas College of Osteopathic Medicine, Fort Worth, Texas, USA

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David Donahue

David Donahue

The Jane and John Justin Neuroscience Center, Comprehensive Epilepsy Program, Cook Children's Medical Center, Fort Worth, Texas

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Saleem Malik

Saleem Malik

The Jane and John Justin Neuroscience Center, Comprehensive Epilepsy Program, Cook Children's Medical Center, Fort Worth, Texas

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Hayden Head

Hayden Head

The Jane and John Justin Neuroscience Center, Comprehensive Epilepsy Program, Cook Children's Medical Center, Fort Worth, Texas

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Cynthia Keator

Cynthia Keator

The Jane and John Justin Neuroscience Center, Comprehensive Epilepsy Program, Cook Children's Medical Center, Fort Worth, Texas

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Angel Hernandez

Angel Hernandez

The Jane and John Justin Neuroscience Center, Comprehensive Epilepsy Program, Cook Children's Medical Center, Fort Worth, Texas

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First published: 19 April 2017
Citations: 16
*

Portions of this work were submitted and presented at the American Epilepsy Society 68th Annual Meeting, Seattle, WA, December 2014.

Abstract

Aims. Multimodal coregistration uses multiple image datasets coregistered to an anatomical reference (i.e. MRI), allowing multiple studies to be viewed together. Commonly used in intractable epilepsy evaluation and generally accepted to improve localization of the epileptogenic zone, data showing that coregistration improves outcome is lacking. We compared seizure freedom following epilepsy surgery in paediatric patients, evaluated before and after the use of coregistration protocols at our centre, to determine whether this correlated with a change in outcome.

Methods. We included paediatric epilepsy surgery patients with at least one anatomical and one functional neuroimaging study as part of their presurgical evaluation. Preoperatively designated palliative procedures and repeat surgeries were excluded. Multiple pre-, peri-, and postoperative variables were compared between groups with the primary outcome of seizure freedom.

Results. In total, 115 were included with an average age of 10.63 years (0.12–20.7). All evaluations included video-EEG (VEEG) and MRI. Seven (6%) had subtraction single-photon emission CT (SPECT), 46 (40%) had positron emission tomography (PET), and 62 (54%) had both as part of their evaluation. Sixty (52%) had extratemporal epilepsy and 25 (22%) were MRI-negative. Sixty-eight (59%) had coregistration. Coregistered patients were less likely to undergo invasive EEG monitoring (p=0.045) and were more likely to have seizure freedom at one (p=0.034) and two years (p<0.001) post-operatively. A logistic regression accounting for multiple covariates supported an association between the use of coregistration and favourable post-surgical outcome.

Conclusions. Coregistered imaging contributes to favourable postoperative seizure reduction compared to visual analysis of individual modalities. Imaging coregistration is associated with improved outcome, independent of other variables after surgery. Coregistered imaging may reduce the need for invasive EEG monitoring, likely due to improved confidence in presurgical localization. These findings support the use of multimodal coregistered imaging as part of the presurgical assessment in patients evaluated for surgical treatment of intractable epilepsy.

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