An ordinal clinical score predicts seizure freedom after minimally invasive epilepsy surgery

Author:

Dickey Adam S.1ORCID,Bullinger Katie L.1,Grogan Dayton2,Asmar Melissa M.3,Alwaki Abdulrahman4,Kheder Ammar5,Shivamurthy Veeresh Kumar N.6,Faraj Razan R.7,Greven Alexander8,Willie Jon T.9,Drane Daniel L.11011,Gross Robert E.1213

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology Emory University Atlanta Georgia USA

2. Department of Neurosurgery University of Virginia Charlottesville Virginia USA

3. Department of Neurology UC Davis Medical Center Sacramento California USA

4. Department of Neurology University of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA

5. Department of Pediatrics Helen DeVos Children's Hospital Grand Rapids Michigan USA

6. Department of Neurology Saint Francis Hospital Hartford Connecticut USA

7. School of Medicine, Emory University Atlanta Georgia USA

8. Department of Neurosurgery Barrow Neurological Institute Phoenix Arizona USA

9. Department of Neurosurgery Washington University St. Louis Missouri USA

10. Department of Neurology University of Washington School of Medicine Seattle Washington USA

11. Department of Pediatrics Emory University Atlanta Georgia USA

12. Department of Neurosurgery Emory University Atlanta Georgia USA

13. Department of Neurosurgery Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School New Brunswick New Jersey USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveTo predict one‐year seizure freedom, using a combination of relevant clinical variables, following stereotactic laser amygdalohippocampotomy for mesial temporal lobe epilepsy in a series of 101 patients.MethodsEight predictors of seizure freedom were selected based on their association with medial temporal lobe epilepsy: (1) MRI evidence of mesial temporal sclerosis (MTS); (2) unitemporal interictal epileptiform discharges; (3) absence of generalized tonic–clonic seizures; (4) history of febrile seizures; (5) onset of epilepsy ≤16 years; (6) absence of an auditory, visual, or vertiginous aura; and (7) unitemporal ictal onset; (8) unitemporal PET hypometabolism. We compared four multivariate models: “MTS,” using just evidence of MTS; “FULL,” using all eight binary predictors; “AIC” using backwards selection of variables; and “SCORE,” using a 0‐to‐8‐point ordinal score awarding one point for each binary predictor.ResultsIn univariate analysis, significant predictors for seizure freedom were evidence of mesial temporal sclerosis (p = 0.011, Fisher exact) and unitemporal interictal discharges (p = 0.005). For multivariate prediction (using leave one‐out cross‐validation), the ordinal SCORE model had a significantly higher area under the curve (AUC 0.70) than the other three models: MTS (AUC 0.54, p = 0.002, Delong's test), FULL (AUC 0.62, p = 0.003), or AIC (AUC 0.53, p < 0.001).InterpretationAn ordinal score incorporating eight independent binary clinical variables predicted seizure freedom better on novel data than a model using MTS alone, a full multivariate model, or a backwards selected model. The ordinal score model represents a simple clinical heuristic to identify which patients should be offered minimally invasive laser surgery.

Funder

National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke

National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences

Publisher

Wiley

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