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The goal is to provide a novel therapeutic option for temporal lobe epilepsy patients when focal impaired awareness seizures cannot be stopped by medications, surgical or laser ablation, or by neurostimulation. The goal is restore consciousness when seizures cannot be stopped. If successful, addition of bilateral thalamic stimulation to existing responsive neurostimulation to rescue consciousness would greatly alter clinical practice and patient outcomes.
Importantly, previous approaches aim to stop seizures, whereas this study aims to use thalamic stimulation to improve a major negative consequence when seizures cannot be stopped. The potential impact extends beyond temporal lobe epilepsy to other seizure types, and may also extend more broadly to inform treatment of other brain disorders associated with impaired consciousness and cognition.
Full description
Impaired consciousness during seizures has a major negative impact on quality of life for people with epilepsy. Consequences include risk of motor vehicle accidents, drowning, poor work and school performance, and social stigmatization. Impaired ictal/postictal arousal may also compromise breathing leading to sudden unexpected death in epilepsy. Although the primary goal of epilepsy care is to stop seizures, restoring conscious awareness in patients whose seizures cannot be stopped (by medications, surgery or deep brain stimulation) could significantly improve outcome. Disorders of consciousness other than epilepsy have long been known to arise from dysfunction of subcortical-cortical arousal circuits. Deep brain stimulation (DBS) of the thalamic intralaminar central lateral nuclei (CL) is a promising approach to restore conscious arousal currently being trialed for chronic disorders of consciousness. Recent neuroimaging and EEG studies have shown that transient impaired consciousness in temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) seizures also depends on subcortical-cortical arousal including thalamic CL. Translational studies from this research group further demonstrate depressed CL function in limbic seizures, and most importantly that thalamic CL stimulation has the potential to restore physiological and behavioral arousal in the ictal and postictal periods. DBS treatment of epilepsy has advanced rapidly with FDA approval of responsive neurostimulation (RNS, NeuroPace) and thalamic anterior nucleus stimulation (Medtronic). Investigational devices such as the Medtronic Summit RC+S provide a unique opportunity for responsive stimulation of up to four separate brain regions, enabling conventional sites such as hippocampus (HC) to be combined with innovative targets such as thalamic CL. Meanwhile, collaborators Mayo Clinic have developed the Epilepsy Personal Assistant Device (EPAD), a custom application running on a hand-held device with bi-directional communication with the RC+S. The EPAD will enable cloud-based data storage, seizure diaries, and automatic behavioral tests. Therefore, the goal is to develop and pilot test the feasibility and safety of bilateral thalamic CL stimulation using RC+S to restore conscious arousal in TLE seizures which are not stopped by conventional responsive neurostimulation, offering hope to greatly improve quality of life in these patients.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
All patients will have evidence of mesial temporal seizures based on either
Subject's seizure focus, based upon clinical history, semiology, electroencephalographic (EEG) findings, and/or neuroimaging, shall demonstrate bilateral or unilateral mesial temporal lobe epilepsy, and subject shall not be good candidate for surgical resection.
Focal epilepsy with disabling seizure counts mean of ≥ 2 per month. Disabling seizures are those with significant negative impact on the patient's life, involving impaired conscious awareness. Seizures counts will be based on patient's self-report. Note that patient's typically have more disabling seizures than they are able to self-report, and may also have additional non-disabling seizures in addition to the disabling seizures required for enrolment.
i. Mean seizure count ≥ 2 per month is established initially for the preceding 6 months at time of Enrollment, using seizures reported by the patient and/or caregiver. Seizures during EMU admissions are not included.
Drug resistance to at least two antiseizure medications (ASM) with adequate dose and duration.
Subject is willing to remain on stable ASM from the Baseline phase through the end of the Randomized CL Stimulation phase. Stable is defined as same medications, but dose adjustments are allowed within accepted therapeutic ranges. Also, short-term benzodiazepines allowed for acute seizure worsening as in prior studies.
Apart from epilepsy, subject must be medically and neurologically stable and must have no other medical condition in the opinion of the treating physician that would preclude the patient from participation. This could include conditions like severe ischemic cardiac disease, progressive dementia or other disorders that could affect surgical eligibility or compliance.
The local treating epilepsy center has recommended the patient for brain stimulation therapy on clinical grounds and without reference to this protocol.
Age 18 to 75 years, inclusive, at time of consent.
Ability and willingness to provide informed consent and participate in the study protocol.
Subject can interpret and to respond, in accordance with the study protocol, to the advisory indicators provided by the device. This includes the ability to recharge the device.
Subject has seizures that are distinct, stereotypical events that can be reliably counted by the patient or caregiver.
Subject can reasonably be expected to maintain a seizure diary alone or with the assistance of a competent individual.
Subject can complete regular office visits and telephone appointments in accordance with the study protocol requirements.
A female subject must have a negative pregnancy test and if sexually active, must be using a reliable form of birth control for the duration of the trial, be surgically sterile, or be at least two years post-menopausal.
Subject has been informed of his or her eligibility for resective surgery as a potential alternative to the study, if such surgery is a reasonable option.
Subject speaks and reads English.
Subject's anatomy will permit implantation of the Medtronic Investigational Summit RC+S generator within 20 mm of the skin surface.
Subject is capable of completing the proposed neuropsychology evaluation and will score no lower than 2 standard deviations below average on the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale.
Exclusion criteria
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5 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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