Brain sodium MRI-derived priors support the estimation of epileptogenic zones using personalized model-based methods in epilepsy

Author:

Azilinon Mikhael123ORCID,Wang Huifang E.1,Makhalova Julia34ORCID,Zaaraoui Wafaa23ORCID,Ranjeva Jean-Philippe23ORCID,Bartolomei Fabrice14ORCID,Guye Maxime23ORCID,Jirsa Viktor1

Affiliation:

1. Aix Marseille Université, INSERM, Institut de Neurosciences des Systèmes (INS) UMR 1106, Marseille, France

2. Aix Marseille University, CNRS, CRMBM, Marseille, France

3. APHM, Timone University Hospital, CEMEREM, Marseille, France

4. APHM, Epileptology and Clinical Neurophysiology Department, Timone Hospital, Marseille, France

Abstract

Abstract Patients presenting with drug-resistant epilepsy are eligible for surgery aiming to remove the regions involved in the production of seizure activities, the so-called epileptogenic zone network (EZN). Thus the accurate estimation of the EZN is crucial. Data-driven, personalized virtual brain models derived from patient-specific anatomical and functional data are used in Virtual Epileptic Patient (VEP) to estimate the EZN via optimization methods from Bayesian inference. The Bayesian inference approach used in previous VEP integrates priors, based on the features of stereotactic-electroencephalography (SEEG) seizures’ recordings. Here, we propose new priors, based on quantitative 23Na-MRI. The 23Na-MRI data were acquired at 7T and provided several features characterizing the sodium signal decay. The hypothesis is that the sodium features are biomarkers of neuronal excitability related to the EZN and will add additional information to VEP estimation. In this paper, we first proposed the mapping from 23Na-MRI features to predict the EZN via a machine learning approach. Then, we exploited these predictions as priors in the VEP pipeline. The statistical results demonstrated that compared with the results from current VEP, the result from VEP based on 23Na-MRI prior has better balanced accuracy, and the similar weighted harmonic mean of the precision and recall.

Publisher

MIT Press

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