Intraoperative electrocorticography using high-frequency oscillations or spikes to tailor epilepsy surgery in the Netherlands (the HFO trial): a randomised, single-blind, adaptive non-inferiority trial

Background Intraoperative electrocorticography is used to tailor epilepsy surgery by analysing interictal spikes or spike patterns that can delineate epileptogenic tissue. High-frequency oscillations (HFOs) on intraoperative electrocorticography have been proposed as a new biomarker of epileptogenic...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Lancet Neurology 2022-11, Vol.21 (11), p.982-993
Hauptverfasser: Zweiphenning, W., Klooster, M.A. van 't, Klink, N.E.C. van, Leijten, F.S.S., Ferrier, C.H., Gebbink, T., Huiskamp, G., Zandvoort, M.E. van, Schooneveld, M.M.J. van, Bourez, M., Goemans, S., Straumann, S., Rijen, P.C. van, Gosselaar, P.H., Eijsden, P. van, Otte, W.M., Diessen, E. van, Braun, K.P.J., Zijlmans, M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background Intraoperative electrocorticography is used to tailor epilepsy surgery by analysing interictal spikes or spike patterns that can delineate epileptogenic tissue. High-frequency oscillations (HFOs) on intraoperative electrocorticography have been proposed as a new biomarker of epileptogenic tissue, with higher specificity than spikes. We prospectively tested the non-inferiority of HFO-guided tailoring of epilepsy surgery to spike-guided tailoring on seizure freedom at 1 year.Methods The HFO trial was a randomised, single-blind, adaptive non-inferiority trial at an epilepsy surgery centre (UMC Utrecht) in the Netherlands. We recruited children and adults (no age limits) who had been referred for intraoperative electrocorticography-tailored epilepsy surgery. Participants were randomly allocated (1:1) to either HFO-guided or spike-guided tailoring, using an online randomisation scheme with permuted blocks generated by an independent data manager, stratified by epilepsy type. Treatment allocation was masked to participants and clinicians who documented seizure outcome, but not to the study team or neurosurgeon. Ictiform spike patterns were always considered in surgical decision making. The primary endpoint was seizure outcome after 1 year (dichotomised as seizure freedom [defined as Engel 1A-11 vs seizure recurrence [Engel 1C-4]). We predefined a non-inferiority margin of 10% risk difference. Analysis was by intention to treat, with prespecified subgroup analyses by epilepsy type and for confounders. This completed trial is registered with the Dutch Trial Register, Toetsingonline ABR.NL44527.041.13, and ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02207673.Findings Between Oct 10, 2014, and Jan 31,2020,78 individuals were enrolled to the study and randomly assigned (39 to HFO-guided tailoring and 39 to spike-guided tailoring). There was no loss to follow-up. Seizure freedom at 1 year occurred in 26 (67%) of 39 participants in the HFO-guided group and 35 (90%) of 39 in the spike-guided group (risk difference -23.5%, 90% CI -39.1 to -7.9; for the 48 patients with temporal lobe epilepsy, the risk difference was -25.5%, -45.1 to -6.0, and for the 30 patients with extratemporal lobe epilepsy it was -20.3%, -46.0 to 5.4). Pathology associated with poor prognosis was identified as a confounding factor, with an adjusted risk difference of-7.9% (90% CI -20.7 to 4.9; adjusted risk difference -12.5%, -31.0 to 5.9, for temporal lobe epilepsy and 5.8%, -7.7 to 19.5, for extratemporal l
DOI:10.1016/S1474-4422(22)00311-8