Detection of seizures with ictal tachycardia, using heart rate variability and patient adaptive logistic regression machine learning methods: A hospital-based validation study

Epileptic Disord. 2024 Apr;26(2):199-208. doi: 10.1002/epd2.20196. Epub 2024 Feb 9.

Abstract

Objective: Automated seizure detection of focal epileptic seizures is needed for objective seizure quantification to optimize the treatment of patients with epilepsy. Heart rate variability (HRV)-based seizure detection using patient-adaptive threshold with logistic regression machine learning (LRML) methods has presented promising performance in a study with a Danish patient cohort. The objective of this study was to assess the generalizability of the novel LRML seizure detection algorithm by validating it in a dataset recorded from long-term video-EEG monitoring (LTM) in a Brazilian patient cohort.

Methods: Ictal and inter-ictal ECG-data epochs recorded during LTM were analyzed retrospectively. Thirty-four patients had 107 seizures (79 focal, 28 generalized tonic-clonic [GTC] including focal-to-bilateral-tonic-clonic seizures) eligible for analysis, with a total of 185.5 h recording. Because HRV-based seizure detection is only suitable in patients with marked ictal autonomic change, patients with >50 beats/min change in heart rate during seizures were selected as responders. The patient-adaptive LRML seizure detection algorithm was applied to all elected ECG data, and results were computed separately for responders and non-responders.

Results: The patient-adaptive LRML seizure detection algorithm yielded a sensitivity of 84.8% (95% CI: 75.6-93.9) with a false alarm rate of .25/24 h in the responder group (22 patients, 59 seizures). Twenty-five of the 26 GTC seizures were detected (96.2%), and 25 of the 33 focal seizures without bilateral convulsions were detected (75.8%).

Significance: The study confirms in a new, independent external dataset the good performance of seizure detection from a previous study and suggests that the method is generalizable. This method seems useful for detecting both generalized and focal epileptic seizures. The algorithm can be embedded in a wearable seizure detection system to alert patients and caregivers of seizures and generate objective seizure counts helping to optimize the treatment of the patients.

Keywords: electrocardiography; epilepsy; focal seizures; seizure alarm.

MeSH terms

  • Electroencephalography / methods
  • Epilepsies, Partial* / complications
  • Heart Rate / physiology
  • Humans
  • Logistic Models
  • Machine Learning
  • Retrospective Studies
  • Seizures*
  • Tachycardia / complications
  • Tachycardia / diagnosis