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Aliza Kumpinsky Emory Neurology, PGY-2 3.8.2016
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Case conference Video Images/report
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Uses 99m Tc-HMPAO or 99m Tc-ECD to study cerebral blood flow Ictal images are obtained by injecting radiotracer at onset of seizure (within seconds) 97% sensitive in temporal lobe epilepsy to identify focus
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Do the results of ictal SPECT add value beyond what is already learned by ictal scalp EEG and MRI? Will it change our management?
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Randomized clinical trial to address whether ictal SPECT added value in mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (MTLE) with hippocampal sclerosis (HS) Hypothesis is that ictal SPECT would NOT decrease invasive EEG and would NOT decrease the probability of offering surgery to MTLE
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Primary Proportion offered surgery Proportion who had invasive EEG monitoring Secondary Post-surgical seizure outcome Hospital cost Length of stay during pre-surgical evaluation Percent with secondarily generalized seizure
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Single center in Brasil, 2002 - 2004 Enrolled at the time of admission for inpatient cvEEG Requirements ≥ 18 years old Clinical picture of medically refractory mesial temporal lobe epilepsy with hippocampal sclerosis (MTLE-HS), such as complex partial seizures with epigastric, autonomic, or psychic auras Interictal EEG that included pathology over temporal lobe MRI showed hippocampal atrophy on T1 and increased hippocampal signal on T2 MRI sequences Failure of 2 AED’s Also included patients with features that did not meet all criteria
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Randomly assigned to +/- SPECT SPECT interpreted by blinded nuclear radiologist Surgical decision process Weekly multi-discipinary meetings where treatment plan was formulated If results suggested that one temporal lobe was responsible for sz and risk of post-op memory deficits was low If results suggested bitemporal MTLE based on MRI or EEG; and SPECT or neuropsychology testing did not lateralize If invasive EEG suggested unilateral sz onset and risk of post-op memory deficits was low If at risk for post-op memory deficits ▪ If could recall 9/16 items surgery invasive EEG surgery WADA surgery
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Intention to treat analysis Hypothesis is that both groups would have similar findings of primary and secondary end points Estimated that a 10% difference would need 120 patients per group
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3 had movement artifact 2 had uneven distribution of radiopharmaceutical Average time seizure onset to radiotracer injection was approx 40 sec
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Proportion offered surgery was similar between SPECT and non-SPECT Proportion who had invasive EEG monitoring was similar between SPECT and non-SPECT
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Mean hospital stay longer in SPECT compared to non-SPECT Hospital costs were 35% higher for SPECT compared to non-SPECT Proportion with secondary generalized seizures was higher in SPECT compared to non-SPECT
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Ictal SPECT was concordant with ictal EEG in 80% (95% CI 72% - 87%) Accuracy was lower in those with bilateral interictal spikes (68%) compared to those with unilateral interictal spikes (90%)
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Out of 240, surgery was considered in 199 and performed in 163 Anterior resection of temporal tip followed by microsurgical resection of mesial temporal structures Typical f/u 56.7 months post-op (range 14 - 73) 57.1% were seizure free (95% CI 50.8 - 63.2) Proportion with Engel class I was similar between SPECT and non-SPECT
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"Ictal SPECT does not add additional localizing value over standard ictal EEG-video telemetry and high quality MRI in pre- surgical evaluation of patients with MTLE- HS"
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If a patient had bilateral independent seizure onsets on EEG --> If patient had MRI and video-EEG that were concordant but ictal SPECT was non-lateralizing --> If video-EEG was ipsilateral to hippocampal atrophy and SPECT was non-concordant --> If results were bilateral --> The authors felt that ictal SPECT would be useful in those with unilateral hippocampal atrophy and ipsilateral interictal EEG + bilateral synchronous ictal EEG findings invasive evaluation surgery no invasive monitoring invasive monitoring
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Not blinded In decision making process, patients with bilateral independent ictal EEG pattern or ictal onset contralateral to hippocampal atrophy required invasive monitoring to confirm ictal EEG onset regardless of other studies More weight to ictal EEG compared to ictal SPECT Only applicable to adults with MTLE-HS
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Not blinded “Comment" section suggested blinding clinicians to results of SPECT and comparing to intracranial EEG rather than using it as a factor in decision-making process Alternate use of ictal SPECT Lateralization or localization of epilepsy is uncertain Guide placement of invasive monitoring Identify bilateral foci
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Utility of ictal-interictal SPECT relies on the decision-making process of the group More investigation is needed on how to use SPECT in a meaningful way in pre-surgical work-up for epilepsy Important to look critically at imaging studies in terms of usefulness and cost-effectiveness
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Utility of ictal single photon emission computed tomography in mesial temporal lobe epilepsy with hippocampal atrophy: a randomized trial. Tonicarlo R Velasco Lauro Wichert-Ana Gary W Mathern David Araújo Roger Walz Marino M Bianchin Charles L Dalmagro Joao P Leite Antonio C Santos Joao A Assirati Carlos G Carlotti Americo C Sakamoto. Neurosurgery online, 2011, Vol.68(2), p.431-6; discussion 436 A methodology for generating normal and pathological brain perfusion SPECT images for evaluation of MRI/SPECT fusion methods: application in epilepsy. C Grova P Jannin A Biraben I Buvat H Benali A M Bernard J M Scarabin B Gibaud. Physics in medicine & biology., 2003, Vol.48(24), p.4023-4043
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