The seizure severity score: a quantitative tool for comparing seizures and their response to therapy

Author:

Pattnaik Akash RORCID,Ghosn Nina JORCID,Ong Ian ZORCID,Revell Andrew YORCID,Ojemann William K SORCID,Scheid Brittany HORCID,Georgostathi GeorgiaORCID,Bernabei John MORCID,Conrad Erin CORCID,Sinha Saurabh RORCID,Davis Kathryn AORCID,Sinha NishantORCID,Litt BrianORCID

Abstract

Abstract Objective. Epilepsy is a neurological disorder characterized by recurrent seizures which vary widely in severity, from clinically silent to prolonged convulsions. Measuring severity is crucial for guiding therapy, particularly when complete control is not possible. Seizure diaries, the current standard for guiding therapy, are insensitive to the duration of events or the propagation of seizure activity across the brain. We present a quantitative seizure severity score that incorporates electroencephalography (EEG) and clinical data and demonstrate how it can guide epilepsy therapies. Approach. We collected intracranial EEG and clinical semiology data from 54 epilepsy patients who had 256 seizures during invasive, in-hospital presurgical evaluation. We applied an absolute slope algorithm to EEG recordings to identify seizing channels. From this data, we developed a seizure severity score that combines seizure duration, spread, and semiology using non-negative matrix factorization. For validation, we assessed its correlation with independent measures of epilepsy burden: seizure types, epilepsy duration, a pharmacokinetic model of medication load, and response to epilepsy surgery. We investigated the association between the seizure severity score and preictal network features. Main results. The seizure severity score augmented clinical classification by objectively delineating seizure duration and spread from recordings in available electrodes. Lower preictal medication loads were associated with higher seizure severity scores (p = 0.018, 97.5% confidence interval = [−1.242, −0.116]) and lower pre-surgical severity was associated with better surgical outcome (p = 0.042). In 85% of patients with multiple seizure types, greater preictal change from baseline was associated with higher severity. Significance. We present a quantitative measure of seizure severity that includes EEG and clinical features, validated on gold standard in-patient recordings. We provide a framework for extending our tool’s utility to ambulatory EEG devices, for linking it to seizure semiology measured by wearable sensors, and as a tool to advance data-driven epilepsy care.

Funder

Burroughs Wellcome Fund

National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke

Mirowski Family Foundation

National Institutes of Health

National Science Foundation

American Epilepsy Society

Thornton Foundation

Publisher

IOP Publishing

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Biomedical Engineering

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