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Thalamus Seizure Detection With a Deep Brain Stimulator System
Sponsor: Mayo Clinic
Summary
The purpose of this study is to determine the feasibility of chronic ambulatory thalamus seizure detection. The sensitivity, specificity, and false alarm rate of thalamus seizure detection will be calculated using recordings from a deep brain stimulation system, assessed relative to concurrent gold-standard video-EEG monitoring collected in the in-patient setting (epilepsy monitoring unit), in 5 patients with drug resistant epilepsy.
Official title: Seizure Detection With a Deep Brain Stimulation System
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
5
Start Date
2026-06-01
Completion Date
2027-05
Last Updated
2026-03-20
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Phase 1-Validation of thalamus seizure detection with concurrent video EEG monitoring
Epilepsy monitoring unit evaluation will follow standard of care practices for seizure characterization, and antiseizure medications may be reduced to facilitate the recording of seizures. Patient clinical management, and video-EEG interpretation will be completed by the clinical epilepsy monitoring unit team which consists of physicians, nurse practitioners, registered nurses, and in-house 24-hour 7-days-per-week EEG technicians. Continuous full-bandwidth thalamus recordings (250 Hz) will be acquired by the research study team using a standard clinician programmer and telemetry module. Hospital monitoring will last up to 4 days.
Phase 2-DBS Stimulation with Medtronic Percept DBS device-Out Patient
Patients will then transition to the ambulatory phase. In the outpatient setting, patients will have constrained ambulatory thalamus recordings using recording parameters determined by Phase 1. DBS treatment stimulation will be programmed in the clinical epilepsy neuromodulation lab using typical high frequency (\>50 Hz) stimulation. High frequency stimulation is the conventional approach to DBS for epilepsy, as was used in the pivotal study leading to premarket approval (SANTE study)2 of anterior nucleus of the thalamus (ANT) DBS for focal epilepsy, which is typical for epilepsy DBS practice3, and several studies of DBS for generalized epilepsy4-6, in a sensing friendly electrode configuration. Patients will keep a detailed seizure diary. Ambulatory thalamus recordings by the DBS system and patient reported seizure diaries will be collected during routine clinical DBS programming visits (q3-9 months).
Locations (1)
Mayo Clinic in Rochester
Rochester, Minnesota, United States