Stroke Clinical Trial
Official title:
Use of a Tonometer to Identify Focal Cortical Dysplasia and Tuberous Sclerosis Complex During Pediatric Epilepsy Surgery
Verified date | October 2023 |
Source | University of California, Los Angeles |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
Refractory epilepsy, meaning epilepsy that no longer responds to medication, is a common neurosurgical indication in children. In such cases, surgery is the treatment of choice. Complete resection of affected brain tissue is associated with highest probability of seizure freedom. However, epileptogenic brain tissue is visually identical to normal brain tissue, complicating complete resection. Modern investigative methods are of limited use. An important subjective assessment during surgery is that affected brain tissue feels stiffer, however there is presently no way to determine this without committing to resecting the affected area. It is hypothesized that intra-operative use of a tonometer (Diaton) will identify abnormal brain tissue stiffness in affected brain relative to normal brain. This will help identify stiffer brain regions without having to resect them. The objective is to determine if intra-operative use of a tonometer to measure brain tissue stiffness will offer additional precision in identifying epileptogenic lesions. In participants with refractory epilepsy, various locations on the cerebral cortex will be identified using standard pre-operative investigations like magnetic resonance imagin (MRI) and positron emission tomography (PET). These are areas of presumed normal and abnormal brain where the tonometer will be used during surgery to measure brain tissue stiffness. Brain tissue stiffness measurements will then be compared with results of routine pre-operative and intra-operative tests. Such comparisons will help determine if and to what extent intra-operative brain tissue stiffness measurements correlate with other tests and help identify epileptogenic brain tissue. 24 participants have already undergone intra-operative brain tonometry. Results in these participants are encouraging: abnormally high brain tissue stiffness measurements have consistently been identified and significantly associated with abnormal brain tissue. If the tonometer adequately identifies epileptogenic brain tissue through brain tissue stiffness measurements, it is possible that resection of identified tissue could lead to better post-operative outcomes, lowering seizure recurrences and neurological deficits.
Status | Withdrawn |
Enrollment | 0 |
Est. completion date | March 2023 |
Est. primary completion date | March 2023 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | N/A and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Participants with epilepsy who candidates for surgical treatment as established by a multidisciplinary committee specialized in epilepsy. - Participants undergoing resective surgery for epilepsy of dysplastic (examples: focal cortical dysplasia, tuberous sclerosis, hemimegalencephaly, polymicrogyria) or non-dysplastic etiology (examples: developmental tumors, gliosis, stroke, Rasmussen encephalitis, Sturge-Weber syndrome). Exclusion Criteria: - Lesion of interest located in a difficult to access region, such as paralimbic structures, insula, depth-of-sulci or inter-hemispheric. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Canada | Sainte-Justine University Hospital | Montreal | Quebec |
United States | UCLA Mattel Children's Hospital | Los Angeles | California |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University of California, Los Angeles | Université de Montréal |
United States, Canada,
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* Note: There are 16 references in all — Click here to view all references
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Brain tissue stiffness measurements in mmHg as assessed by intraoperative use of a digital tonometer on presumed normal cerebral cortex | Brain tonometry is a novel diagnostic approach, therefore normal and abnormal brain tissue stiffness values are not known. Measurements will be taken on presumed normal cerebral cortex, based on results of preoperative evaluations (magnetic resonance imaging, electro-encephalography, positron emission tomography), to establish potential normal brain tissue stiffness values. | Intraoperative | |
Primary | Brain tissue stiffness measurements in mmHg as assessed by intraoperative use of a digital tonometer on presumed pathological cerebral cortex | Brain tonometry is a novel diagnostic approach, therefore normal and abnormal brain tissue stiffness values are not known. Measurements will be taken on presumed pathological (ex.: focal cortical dysplasia, tuberous sclerosis complex) cerebral cortex, based on results of preoperative evaluations (magnetic resonance imaging, electro-encephalography, positron emission tomography), to establish potential pathological brain tissue stiffness values. | Intraoperative | |
Primary | Correlation between brain tissue stiffness measurements in mmHg as assessed by novel intraoperative use of a digital tonometer and results of standard perioperative evaluations, using a 3D model of each brain | Precise stereotactic coordinates for each brain tissue stiffness measurement will be recorded in a neuronavigation software. This will allow aggregation of brain tissue stiffness measurements and results of routine preoperative (MRI, EEG, PET), as well as intra-operative tests (ECoG, histopathological analysis of resected brain tissue) on a 3D model of each patient's brain.
With this method, each brain tissue stiffness measurement can be compared to presence or absence of an underlying lesion on MRI; to presence or absence of epileptogenic foci on EEG; to presence of iso- or hypometabolism on PET; to presence or absence of epileptogenic foci on ECoG; to pathological diagnosis and severity of cortical disorganization on histopathological analysis. This will give insight into how well brain tissue stiffness measurements correlate with, and potentially identify, structural and functional epileptic brain anomalies. |
Perioperative | |
Secondary | Surgical complications as assessed clinically on standard postoperative follow-up through study completion, up to 36 months | The intraoperative use of the tonometer should not affect patient outcome. To support this, surgical complications, as they relate to the participants of this study, will be recorded on clinical follow-up, to be compared with the available literature. Number of patients with surgical complications, as well as the nature of the complications will be recorded. Of note, there are no additional visits required for this study after participation in the operating room. Follow-up remains as planned according the the nature of the patient's condition and surgery. | Through study completion, up to 36 months | |
Secondary | Seizure freedom as assessed clinically on standard postoperative follow-up through study completion, up to 36 months | The intraoperative use of the tonometer should not affect patient outcome. To support this, seizure freedom, as it relates to the participants of this study, will be recorded on clinical follow-up, to be compared with the available literature. Number of patients achieving seizure freedom, as well as number of patients not achieving seizure freedom will be recorded. Time to seizure recurrence will also be recorded. Of note, there are no additional visits required for this study after participation in the operating room. Follow-up remains as planned according the the nature of the patient's condition and surgery. | Through study completion, up to 36 months |
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