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1.
Epilepsia ; 65(3): 817-829, 2024 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38148517

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: Clinicians use intracranial electroencephalography (iEEG) in conjunction with noninvasive brain imaging to identify epileptic networks and target therapy for drug-resistant epilepsy cases. Our goal was to promote ongoing and future collaboration by automating the process of "electrode reconstruction," which involves the labeling, registration, and assignment of iEEG electrode coordinates on neuroimaging. We developed a standalone, modular pipeline that performs electrode reconstruction. We demonstrate our tool's compatibility with clinical and research workflows and its scalability on cloud platforms. METHODS: We created iEEG-recon, a scalable electrode reconstruction pipeline for semiautomatic iEEG annotation, rapid image registration, and electrode assignment on brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Its modular architecture includes a clinical module for electrode labeling and localization, and a research module for automated data processing and electrode contact assignment. To ensure accessibility for users with limited programming and imaging expertise, we packaged iEEG-recon in a containerized format that allows integration into clinical workflows. We propose a cloud-based implementation of iEEG-recon and test our pipeline on data from 132 patients at two epilepsy centers using retrospective and prospective cohorts. RESULTS: We used iEEG-recon to accurately reconstruct electrodes in both electrocorticography and stereoelectroencephalography cases with a 30-min running time per case (including semiautomatic electrode labeling and reconstruction). iEEG-recon generates quality assurance reports and visualizations to support epilepsy surgery discussions. Reconstruction outputs from the clinical module were radiologically validated through pre- and postimplant T1-MRI visual inspections. We also found that our use of ANTsPyNet deep learning-based brain segmentation for electrode classification was consistent with the widely used FreeSurfer segmentations. SIGNIFICANCE: iEEG-recon is a robust pipeline for automating reconstruction of iEEG electrodes and implantable devices on brain MRI, promoting fast data analysis and integration into clinical workflows. iEEG-recon's accuracy, speed, and compatibility with cloud platforms make it a useful resource for epilepsy centers worldwide.


Assuntos
Eletrocorticografia , Epilepsia , Humanos , Eletrocorticografia/métodos , Estudos Retrospectivos , Estudos Prospectivos , Epilepsia/diagnóstico por imagem , Epilepsia/cirurgia , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética/métodos , Eletrodos , Eletroencefalografia/métodos , Eletrodos Implantados
2.
Brain Commun ; 6(3): fcae165, 2024.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38799618

RESUMO

Studies of intracranial EEG networks have been used to reveal seizure generators in patients with drug-resistant epilepsy. Intracranial EEG is implanted to capture the epileptic network, the collection of brain tissue that forms a substrate for seizures to start and spread. Interictal intracranial EEG measures brain activity at baseline, and networks computed during this state can reveal aberrant brain tissue without requiring seizure recordings. Intracranial EEG network analyses require choosing a reference and applying statistical measures of functional connectivity. Approaches to these technical choices vary widely across studies, and the impact of these technical choices on downstream analyses is poorly understood. Our objective was to examine the effects of different re-referencing and connectivity approaches on connectivity results and on the ability to lateralize the seizure onset zone in patients with drug-resistant epilepsy. We applied 48 pre-processing pipelines to a cohort of 125 patients with drug-resistant epilepsy recorded with interictal intracranial EEG across two epilepsy centres to generate intracranial EEG functional connectivity networks. Twenty-four functional connectivity measures across time and frequency domains were applied in combination with common average re-referencing or bipolar re-referencing. We applied an unsupervised clustering algorithm to identify groups of pre-processing pipelines. We subjected each pre-processing approach to three quality tests: (i) the introduction of spurious correlations; (ii) robustness to incomplete spatial sampling; and (iii) the ability to lateralize the clinician-defined seizure onset zone. Three groups of similar pre-processing pipelines emerged: common average re-referencing pipelines, bipolar re-referencing pipelines and relative entropy-based connectivity pipelines. Relative entropy and common average re-referencing networks were more robust to incomplete electrode sampling than bipolar re-referencing and other connectivity methods (Friedman test, Dunn-Sidák test P < 0.0001). Bipolar re-referencing reduced spurious correlations at non-adjacent channels better than common average re-referencing (Δ mean from machine ref = -0.36 versus -0.22) and worse in adjacent channels (Δ mean from machine ref = -0.14 versus -0.40). Relative entropy-based network measures lateralized the seizure onset hemisphere better than other measures in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (Benjamini-Hochberg-corrected P < 0.05, Cohen's d: 0.60-0.76). Finally, we present an interface where users can rapidly evaluate intracranial EEG pre-processing choices to select the optimal pre-processing methods tailored to specific research questions. The choice of pre-processing methods affects downstream network analyses. Choosing a single method among highly correlated approaches can reduce redundancy in processing. Relative entropy outperforms other connectivity methods in multiple quality tests. We present a method and interface for researchers to optimize their pre-processing methods for deriving intracranial EEG brain networks.

3.
medRxiv ; 2023 Jun 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37398160

RESUMO

Background: Collaboration between epilepsy centers is essential to integrate multimodal data for epilepsy research. Scalable tools for rapid and reproducible data analysis facilitate multicenter data integration and harmonization. Clinicians use intracranial EEG (iEEG) in conjunction with non-invasive brain imaging to identify epileptic networks and target therapy for drug-resistant epilepsy cases. Our goal was to promote ongoing and future collaboration by automating the process of "electrode reconstruction," which involves the labeling, registration, and assignment of iEEG electrode coordinates on neuroimaging. These tasks are still performed manually in many epilepsy centers. We developed a standalone, modular pipeline that performs electrode reconstruction. We demonstrate our tool's compatibility with clinical and research workflows and its scalability on cloud platforms. Methods: We created iEEG-recon, a scalable electrode reconstruction pipeline for semi-automatic iEEG annotation, rapid image registration, and electrode assignment on brain MRIs. Its modular architecture includes three modules: a clinical module for electrode labeling and localization, and a research module for automated data processing and electrode contact assignment. To ensure accessibility for users with limited programming and imaging expertise, we packaged iEEG-recon in a containerized format that allows integration into clinical workflows. We propose a cloud-based implementation of iEEG-recon, and test our pipeline on data from 132 patients at two epilepsy centers using retrospective and prospective cohorts. Results: We used iEEG-recon to accurately reconstruct electrodes in both electrocorticography (ECoG) and stereoelectroencephalography (SEEG) cases with a 10 minute running time per case, and ~20 min for semi-automatic electrode labeling. iEEG-recon generates quality assurance reports and visualizations to support epilepsy surgery discussions. Reconstruction outputs from the clinical module were radiologically validated through pre- and post-implant T1-MRI visual inspections. Our use of ANTsPyNet deep learning approach for brain segmentation and electrode classification was consistent with the widely used Freesurfer segmentation. Discussion: iEEG-recon is a valuable tool for automating reconstruction of iEEG electrodes and implantable devices on brain MRI, promoting efficient data analysis, and integration into clinical workflows. The tool's accuracy, speed, and compatibility with cloud platforms make it a useful resource for epilepsy centers worldwide. Comprehensive documentation is available at https://ieeg-recon.readthedocs.io/en/latest/.

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