Publication details

Prognostic value of the 5-SENSE Score to predict focality of the seizure-onset zone as assessed by stereoelectroencephalography: a prospective international multicentre validation study

Authors

ASTNER-ROHRACHER Alexandra HO Alyssa ARCHER John BARTOLOMEI Fabrice BRÁZDIL Milan MELITA Cacic Hribljan CASTELLANO James DOLEŽALOVÁ Irena FABRICIUS Martin Ejler GARCES-SANCHEZ Mercedes HAMMAM Kahina IKEDA Akio IKEDA Kristin KAHANE Philippe KALAMANGALAM Giridhar KALSS Gudrun KHWEILEH Mays KOBAYASHI Katsuya KWAN Patrick LAING Joshua Andrew LEITINGER Markus LHATOO Samden MAKHALOVA Julia MCGONIGAL Aileen MINDRUTA Iona MIZERA Mary Margaret NEAL Andrew OANE Irina PARIKH Prachi PERUCCA Piero PIZZO Francesca ROCAMORA Rodrigo RYVLIN Philippe VICTORIA San Antonio Arce SCHUELE Stephan SCHULZE-BONHAGE Andreas ANA Suller Marti URBAN Alexandra VILLANUEVA Vincente LAURA Vilella Bertran WHATLEY Benjamin BENICZKY Sandor TRINKA Eugen ZIMMERMANN Georg FRAUSCHER Birgit

Year of publication 2024
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source BMJ Neurology Open
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Medicine

Citation
web https://neurologyopen.bmj.com/content/6/2/e000765
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjno-2024-000765
Keywords EPILEPSY; EPILEPSY; SURGERY; NEUROPHYSIOLOGY; EEG
Description Introduction Epilepsy surgery is the only curative treatment for patients with drug-resistant focal epilepsy. Stereoelectroencephalography (SEEG) is the gold standard to delineate the seizure-onset zone (SOZ). However, up to 40% of patients are subsequently not operated as no focal non-eloquent SOZ can be identified. The 5-SENSE Score is a 5-point score to predict whether a focal SOZ is likely to be identified by SEEG. This study aims to validate the 5-SENSE Score, improve score performance by incorporating auxiliary diagnostic methods and evaluate its concordance with expert decisions.Methods and analysis Non-interventional, observational, multicentre, prospective study including 200 patients with drug-resistant epilepsy aged >= 15 years undergoing SEEG for identification of a focal SOZ and 200 controls at 22 epilepsy surgery centres worldwide. The primary objective is to assess the diagnostic accuracy and generalisability of the 5-SENSE in predicting focality in SEEG in a prospective cohort. Secondary objectives are to optimise score performance by incorporating auxiliary diagnostic methods and to analyse concordance of the 5-SENSE Score with the expert decisions made in the multidisciplinary team discussion.Ethics and dissemination Prospective multicentre validation of the 5-SENSE score may lead to its implementation into clinical practice to assist clinicians in the difficult decision of whether to proceed with implantation. This study will be conducted in accordance with the Tri-Council Policy Statement: Ethical Conduct for Research Involving Humans (2014). We plan to publish the study results in a peer-reviewed full-length original article and present its findings at scientific conferences.Trial registration number NCT06138808.

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