Preliminary evidence of a relationship between sleep spindles and treatment response in epileptic encephalopathy

Author:

McLaren John R.12,Luo Yancheng12,Kwon Hunki12ORCID,Shi Wen12ORCID,Kramer Mark A.3ORCID,Chu Catherine J.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology Massachusetts General Hospital Boston 02114 Massachusetts USA

2. Harvard Medical School Boston 02115 Massachusetts USA

3. Department of Mathematics and Statistics & Center for Systems Neuroscience Boston University Boston 02215 Massachusetts USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveEpileptic encephalopathy with spike‐wave activation in sleep (EE‐SWAS) is a challenging neurodevelopmental disease characterized by abundant epileptiform spikes during non‐rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep accompanied by cognitive dysfunction. The mechanism of cognitive dysfunction is unknown, but treatment with high‐dose diazepam may improve symptoms. Spike rate does not predict treatment response, but spikes may disrupt sleep spindles. We hypothesized that in patients with EE‐SWAS: (1) spikes and spindles would be anti‐correlated, (2) high‐dose diazepam would increase spindles and decrease spikes, and (3) spindle response would be greater in those with cognitive improvement.MethodsConsecutive EE‐SWAS patients treated with high‐dose diazepam that met the criteria were included. Using a validated automated spindle detector, spindle rate, duration, and percentage were computed in pre‐ and post‐treatment NREM sleep. Spikes were quantified using a validated automated spike detector. The cognitive response was determined from a chart review.ResultsSpindle rate was anti‐correlated with the spike rate in the channel with the maximal spike rate (p = 0.002) and averaged across all channels (p = 0.0005). Spindle rate, duration, and percentage each increased, and spike rate decreased, after high‐dose diazepam treatment (p ≤ 2e‐5, all tests). Spindle rate, duration, and percentage (p ≤ 0.004, all tests) were increased in patients with cognitive improvement after treatment, but not those without. Changes in spindle rate but not changes in spike rate distinguished between groups.InterpretationThese findings confirm thalamocortical disruption in EE‐SWAS, identify a mechanism through which benzodiazepines may support cognitive recovery, and introduce sleep spindles as a promising mechanistic biomarker to detect treatment response in severe epileptic encephalopathies.

Funder

National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Neurology (clinical),General Neuroscience

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1. Epilepsy Surgery for Cognitive Improvement in Epileptic Encephalopathy;Neurosurgery Clinics of North America;2024-01

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