From Dr. Laura Lubbers <[email protected]>
Subject Optimizing Brain Stimulation for People with Drug-Resistant Epilepsy
Date September 28, 2021 9:00 PM
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A new biomarker that could predict who would most benefit from RNS therapy

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Optimizing Brain Stimulation for People with Drug-Resistant Epilepsy

Key Points:
* Taking Flight grantee Dr. Ankit Khambhati and colleagues at the University of California – San Francisco sought to understand why some people with drug-resistant epilepsy respond better than others to responsive neurostimulation (RNS) therapy.
* After examining the pattern of brain waves of approximately 50 patients, the investigators identified a new biomarker that could predict which people would most benefit from RNS therapy.
* This important finding has the potential to help neurologists decide which patients would benefit the most from an RNS device before it is actually implanted in the brain.

Deep Dive:

Of the millions of people who are impacted by epilepsy, approximately one-third do not respond to currently available antiseizure medications [1], adversely affecting their quality of life. Among those with drug-resistant focal epilepsy (seizures that start from a single area in the brain, formerly known as partial seizures), one of the more effective treatment options involves brain stimulation [2], including the Neuropace Responsive Neurostimulation System® (RNS) [3]. The RNS is a ‘smart’ device implanted on the surface of the brain, with two thin wires placed where the seizures begin. It monitors brain waves recorded from the wires to produce what is called an intracranial electroencephalogram (iEEG). When the RNS device senses abnormal neural activity, it responds with subtle electrical pulses to either terminate or suppress an emerging seizure. The iEEG data can also be mined for research purposes to identify changing patterns in the brain waves as a patient’s condition improves.

The RNS is effective at reducing seizures in many patients with focal epilepsy, but it does not work for every patient, and it is not clear why. Dr. Khambhati and his colleagues, Drs. Edward Chang and Vikram Rao, thought that the lack of response in some people may be related to some seemingly inconsistent observations from numerous clinical trials of the RNS System. As mentioned above, the RNS device was designed to send electrical pulses to terminate a developing seizure only when abnormal electrical activity was detected, but the researchers found actual stimulation often occurred more than 1,000 times a day. This did not correlate with the actual number of seizures reported suggesting a significant amount of abnormal activity between seizures. In addition, clinically significant improvements, i.e., reduction in seizure frequency, occurred gradually over time, often years rather than just immediately after electrical stimulation by RNS [4]. Together, these observations suggested that
there is abnormal electrical activity that occurs between seizures, possibly exacerbating them, and that the RNS device both terminates seizures and may also slowly modify how they are generated.
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Your support makes this research possible. ([link removed]) Our researchers’ important work continues through the current public health crisis and beyond thanks to generous donors who, like us, envision a world without epilepsy.
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