Multimodal nocturnal seizure detection in a residential care setting: A long-term prospective trial

Publication date

2018-11-20

Authors

Arends, Johan
Thijs, Roland D.
Gutter, Thea
Ungureanu, Constantin
Cluitmans, Pierre
Van Dijk, Johannes
van Andel, Judith
Tan, Francis
de Weerd, Al
Vledder, Ben

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

Collections

Open Access logo

License

cc_by_nc_nd

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To develop and prospectively evaluate a method of epileptic seizure detection combining heart rate and movement. METHODS: In this multicenter, in-home, prospective, video-controlled cohort study, nocturnal seizures were detected by heart rate (photoplethysmography) or movement (3-D accelerometry) in persons with epilepsy and intellectual disability. Participants with >1 monthly major seizure wore a bracelet (Nightwatch) on the upper arm at night for 2 to 3 months. Major seizures were tonic-clonic, generalized tonic >30 seconds, hyperkinetic, or others, including clusters (>30 minutes) of short myoclonic/tonic seizures. The video of all events (alarms, nurse diaries) and 10% completely screened nights were reviewed to classify major (needing an alarm), minor (needing no alarm), or no seizure. Reliability was tested by interobserver agreement. We determined device performance, compared it to a bed sensor (Emfit), and evaluated the caregivers' user experience. RESULTS: Twenty-eight of 34 admitted participants (1,826 nights, 809 major seizures) completed the study. Interobserver agreement (major/no major seizures) was 0.77 (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.65-0.89). Median sensitivity per participant amounted to 86% (95% CI 77%-93%); the false-negative alarm rate was 0.03 per night (95% CI 0.01-0.05); and the positive predictive value was 49% (95% CI 33%-64%). The multimodal sensor showed a better sensitivity than the bed sensor (n = 14, median difference 58%, 95% CI 39%-80%, p < 0.001). The caregivers' questionnaire (n = 33) indicated good sensor acceptance and usability according to 28 and 27 participants, respectively. CONCLUSION: Combining heart rate and movement resulted in reliable detection of a broad range of nocturnal seizures.

Keywords

Clinical Neurology

Citation

Arends, J, Thijs, R D, Gutter, T, Ungureanu, C, Cluitmans, P, Van Dijk, J, van Andel, J, Tan, F, de Weerd, A, Vledder, B, Hofstra, W, Lazeron, R, van Thiel, G, Roes, K C B, Leijten, F & and the Dutch Tele-Epilepsy Consortium 2018, 'Multimodal nocturnal seizure detection in a residential care setting : A long-term prospective trial', Neurology, vol. 91, no. 21, pp. e2010-e2019. https://doi.org/10.1212/WNL.0000000000006545