NeuroImage: Clinical (Jan 2020)

Topographic brain tumor anatomy drives seizure risk and enables machine learning based prediction

  • Kevin Akeret,
  • Vittorio Stumpo,
  • Victor E. Staartjes,
  • Flavio Vasella,
  • Julia Velz,
  • Federica Marinoni,
  • Jean-Philippe Dufour,
  • Lukas L. Imbach,
  • Luca Regli,
  • Carlo Serra,
  • Niklaus Krayenbühl

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 28
p. 102506

Abstract

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Objective: The aim of this study was to identify relevant risk factors for epileptic seizures upon initial diagnosis of a brain tumor and to develop and validate a machine learning based prediction to allow for a tailored risk-based antiepileptic therapy. Methods: Clinical, electrophysiological and high-resolution imaging data was obtained from a consecutive cohort of 1051 patients with newly diagnosed brain tumors. Factor-associated seizure risk difference allowed to determine the relevance of specific topographic, demographic and histopathologic variables available at the time of diagnosis for seizure risk. The data was divided in a 70/30 ratio into a training and test set. Different machine learning based predictive models were evaluated before a generalized additive model (GAM) was selected considering its traceability while maintaining high performance. Based on a clinical stratification of the risk factors, three different GAM were trained and internally validated. Results: A total of 923 patients had full data and were included. Specific topographic anatomical patterns that drive seizure risk could be identified. The involvement of allopallial, mesopallial or primary motor/somatosensory neopallial structures by brain tumors results in a significant and clinically relevant increase in seizure risk. While topographic input was most relevant for the GAM, the best prediction was achieved by a combination of topographic, demographic and histopathologic information (Validation: AUC: 0.79, Accuracy: 0.72, Sensitivity: 0.81, Specificity: 0.66). Conclusions: This study identifies specific phylogenetic anatomical patterns as epileptic drivers. A GAM allowed the prediction of seizure risk using topographic, demographic and histopathologic data achieving fair performance while maintaining transparency.

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