Objective: To evaluate the interactions of metabolic neuronal-glial changes with the presence and hemispheric-side of hippocampal sclerosis (HS) and its potential role in predicting pharmacoresistance in temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE).
Methods: We included structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (1 H-MRS) metabolic data for 91 patients with unilateral TLE and 50 healthy controls. We measured the values of total N-acetyl aspartate/total creatine (tNAA/tCr), glutamate/tCr (Glu/tCr), and myo-inositol/tCr (mIns/tCr). To assess the influence of the pharmacoresponse and hemispheric-side of HS on metabolic data, the relationship between clinical and MRI data, and the predictive value of NAA/Cr, we used analysis of variance/covariance and built a logistic regression model. We used bootstrap simulations to evaluate reproducibility.
Results: Bilateral tNAA/tCr reduction was associated with pharmacoresistance and with left HS, a decrease of Glu/tCr ipsilateral to the seizure focus was associated with pharmacoresistance, and ipsilateral mIns/tCr increase was related to pharmacoresistance and the presence of left HS. The logistic regression model containing clinical and 1 H-MRS data discriminated pharmacoresistance (area under the curve [AUC] = 0.78). However, the reduction of tNAA/tCr was the main predictor, with the odds 2.48 greater for pharmacoresistance.
Significance: Our study revealed a spectrum of neuronal-glial changes in TLE, which was associated with pharmacoresistance, being more severe in left-sided HS and less severe in MRI-negative TLE. These noninvasive, in vivo biomarkers provide valuable additional information about the interhemispheric differences in metabolic dysfunction, seizure burden, and HS, and may help to predict pharmacoresistance.
Keywords: MRI; antiepileptic drugs; magnetic resonance spectroscopy; metabolomics; partial seizures.
© 2020 International League Against Epilepsy.