Neurologia Medico-Chirurgica (Jul 2023)

Additional Effect of High-output Current and/or High-duty Cycle in Vagus Nerve Stimulation for Adolescent/Adult Intractable Epilepsy

  • Kentaro TAMURA,
  • Ryota SASAKI,
  • Takafumi SAKAKIBARA,
  • Riju DAHAL,
  • Yasuhiro TAKESHIMA,
  • Ryosuke MATSUDA,
  • Shuichi YAMADA,
  • Fumihiko NISHIMURA,
  • Ichiro NAKAGAWA,
  • Young-Soo PARK,
  • Hidehiro HIRABAYASHI,
  • Hiroyuki NAKASE

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2176/jns-nmc.2022-0280
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 63, no. 7
pp. 273 – 282

Abstract

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A vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) device delivers electrical pulses to the vagus nerve at a rhythm defined by the duty cycle. The standard therapeutic range is advocated for an output current of 1.5-2.25 mA and a duty cycle of 10%. As the optimal settings vary from patient to patient, some patients may benefit from additional seizure reduction when stimulated beyond the standard range. A total of 74 patients (15 children aged <12 years and 59 adolescents/adults) who underwent VNS implantation between 2011 and 2020 and who were followed up for at least 2 years were included in this retrospective study. Stimulation parameters exceeding 2.25 mA of output current, 25% of duty cycle, and 0.5625 (2.25 mA× 25%) of current × duty cycle were defined as high stimulation. The proportion achieved an additional seizure reduction of 20%, and the 50% seizure reduction rate at the last follow-up was compared between adolescents/adults and children. Approximately 40% of patients in adolescents/adults treated with high stimulation experienced an additional acute effect, resulting in a 50% or greater reduction in seizures in almost all patients. Moreover, in adolescents/adults, 22.2%-41.9% of the patients were treated with high stimulation, and the responder rate was 69.5%. Conversely, the responder rate in children was 26.7%, significantly worse than that in adolescents/adults, despite higher stimulation. VNS with high-stimulation settings is effective for adolescent and adult patients with intractable epilepsy. Even high stimulation may not be effective in extremely refractory pediatric epilepsy with a high seizure frequency.

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