Read and React: Implantable Devices Could Stop
Seizures in Their Tracks
By Jim Kling
Special to EpilepsyUSA
Posted: May 15, 2006
Antiepileptic
drugs have provided tremendous relief for many people with epilepsy.
But around one-third of patients with epilepsy continue to have
seizures despite medication, according to Brian Litt, M.D., an
associate professor of neurology and bioengineering at the University
of Pennsylvania, and a member of the Epilepsy Foundation's professional
advisory board.
Epilepsy surgery can cure another 7 to 8 percent
of patients, but many patients cannot undergo the procedure because
their seizures originate at multiple seizure focuses, or because a
focus is in or close to a critical region of the brain where surgical
removal carries a high risk of impairing normal function.
Currently,
such patients have little recourse. One implantable treatment device is
FDA-approved: the vagus nerve stimulator – which is inserted under the
skin near the collarbone, where it periodically applies mild electrical
stimulation to the vagus nerve that connects parts of the upper body to
the brain, which can lead to a decrease in the number and severity of
seizures. The device is safe and one significant advantage is it has
limited, benign side effects that diminish over time. Yet, about
one-third of patients experience a major reduction in the number of
seizures, another one-third experience moderate improvement, and the
final third experience no change.
Today, however, advances in
computer software and engineering have produced a new generation of
implantable devices that may hold greater promise, though proponents
insist it is too early to be sure they are a significant improvement
over the VNS. The new devices take a more direct approach. They provide
electrical stimulation to the seizure focus. 'Open loop' devices
provide constant or intermittent stimulation, similar to the VNS. The
medical device company Medtronic is conducting clinical trials on its
Intercept Epilepsy Control System, which operates on this principle.
The
Medtronic device is designed to disrupt the parts of the brain
responsible for causing epileptic seizures by providing electrical
pulses directly to the brain. The system involves three implantable
components: a neurotransmitter (implanted in the chest), extensions
(two small, insulated wires that are threaded from the neurotransmitter
to the head) and leads (electrodes that are implanted in the thalamus).
In addition, and much like the VNS, patients can self-activate
additional stimulation when they sense an oncoming seizure.
Others
are taking this concept one step further, taking advantage of advances
in computer software that can analyze an EEG signal in real time and
recognize the beginnings of a seizure. An implantable device with a
microchip running such software, or a 'closed-loop' system, only
delivers a therapeutic intervention when it is needed. Part of the
reason for a more controlled approach is that animal studies have shown
electrical stimulation – the most common therapeutic option – can have
a variety of effects, including causing local changes in function and
even seizures, in rare cases.
"Nobody is suggesting that an
open-loop device can cause injury or epilepsy, but the brain is a very
dynamic organ, so, theoretically, less stimulation is better than more.
But this has not been clearly proven," Litt said.
In fact,
efforts to treat epilepsy using electrical stimulation of the brain
date to the 1970s, with a number of small human studies showing
occasional glimmers of improvement. But there have also been
conflicting results, in part because researchers used a variety of
devices and parameters on patients with different types of epilepsy.
More controlled studies using closed loop devices could improve that
track record. There is a clear precedent in the treatment of
arrhythmias, which are abnormal heart rhythms that are also related to
electrical disturbances.
"Closed-loop seizure devices were
inspired by implantable cardiac defibrillators (pacemakers), which have
been wildly successful… so people are trying to port that same type of
technology over to seizure control," Litt said.
The 'Vanguard'
NeuroPace,
Inc., based in Mountain View, California, is currently developing an
implantable device called the Response Neurostimulator. The RNS is a
closed-loop device with programmable software that continuously records
an EEG. It then sends an electrical pulse into the surrounding areas of
the brain when it detects signals characteristic of an oncoming seizure
in hopes of stopping it before it spreads and gathers strength.
"The
analogy is, you detect a little spark and try to put it out before it
causes a fire," said Martha Morrell, M.D., who is a clinical professor
of neurology at Stanford University, and the chief medical officer of
NeuroPace.
In an earlier NeuroPace-sponsored feasibility
study
of 65 patients with medically-uncontrolled seizures, patients
experienced no serious side effects related to the device, and the
majority responded with a decrease in both the frequency and severity
of seizures. Based on that trial, the FDA granted the company approval
to conduct a pivotal investigational trial, the results of which the
agency will use in determining whether to grant approval. That trial,
launched in December 2005, will enroll 220 people with
medically-uncontrolled partial-onset seizures at 28 sites across the
United States. The company hopes to complete enrollment in 2007.
NeuroPace
researchers hope to learn more from the trial than just the efficacy of
the device. The RNS will record EEG data from the patient's brain,
which can then be uploaded through a hand-held device to a computer for
further study. Morrell anticipates that the devices will detect
seizures so mild that the patient does not even notice them.
"We
don't necessarily know whether these electrical seizures are
significant or not," Morrell said, but she continued by saying they
should inform future research.
Steven Rothman, M.D., a professor
of neurology at the Washington University School of Medicine who is
working on his own innovative device, said he is impressed with
NeuroPace's device. "The results I've seen suggest that the RNS is very
promising."
The 'Smooth Operator'
Most electrical
stimulation devices use high-frequency, and higher energy, electrical
stimulation. This, in effect, overwhelms the neural network so that it
becomes temporarily quiet. The approach shows some promise, but some
researchers suspect that this brute force approach is a bit extreme.
"It's
often the same effect as surgically removing that part of the brain. We
refer to it as a reversible lesion," said Steven Schiff, M.D., Ph.D., a
professor of neurobiology and the director of the Center for Neural
Dynamics at George Mason University.
Along with his
collaborator, Bruce Gluckman, Ph.D., a professor of physics and
astronomy at George Mason, Schiff is working on a second generation
electrical stimulation approach. The method would use more frequent but
milder stimulation to gently guide neural systems and modify the
excitability of the individual cells.
The idea is that a device
could continuously read EEG signals and react to an unusual pattern by
giving it a gentle electrical 'nudge.' The device would then note the
effect in the EEG and make more adjustments as necessary, gently
guiding the brain back to a normal electrical pattern.
The idea
is analogous to "the way you keep your eyes open as you drive, getting
continual feedback from the road so that you make small adjustments to
the left or right to keep the car centered in the lane," Schiff said.
Gentle corrections work better than waiting until the car is
significantly off course and then jerking the wheel back to center. It
works, but the ride is much less smooth.
Schiff became interested in feedback mechanisms
because he felt that that high-frequency stimulation is too
unpredictable.
"There
was no knob that we could turn left and right to balance the system
without some operating point. We thought we probably had to use
electric fields and currents in a continual mode – you couldn't just
bang away at it with occasional pulses," he said.
Schiff has
begun testing the system in rats. If successful, a feedback system
could be incorporated into the next generation of implantable devices.
Schiff estimates that his approach would use between one-tenth and
one-hundredth of the electrical power used by current devices. By
minimizing the amount of stimulation required, he also hopes to make
such stimulation safer than the current higher powered approaches. He
believes that a feedback mechanism could potentially control the
wayward patterns of seizures without affecting normal brain activity,
and do it using the least possible electrical stimulation.
The 'Ice Man'
Electrical
stimulation is not the only therapeutic intervention being investigated
for implantable devices. Another approach, headed by the aforementioned
Rothman, is still in the animal experimentation stage. It seeks to
chill neurons, which dampens their activity and interrupts a seizure.
After the treatment, cells warm up again and return to normal
functioning.
The device is based on work dating back to the
late
19th century, when German scientists showed localized cooling could
diminish neurological function. Throughout the 20th century,
researchers used cooling in animal studies to identify the location of
specific brain functions. Rothman's device consists of an electrical
circuit that, when activated, cools down at one end and heats up at the
other. Implanted near the focal point of a patient's seizures, the cool
end could chill nearby cells, dampening their activity. His team
demonstrated it can interrupt seizures in rats.
Rothman says
technical hurdles must be overcome to build a device small enough to
implant in human subjects, though his team is working on the problem.
In the meantime, he plans to use a water-cooled device to test on
patients undergoing brain-mapping to find the seizure onset zones in
preparation for surgery. He hopes the study will demonstrate the amount
of cooling necessary to interrupt a seizure in humans. The results will
help in the design of a device for human use.
"An educated guess
would be that in situations where you can localize a patient's seizures
to an area on the surface of the brain, cooling might have the most
specific and localized effect. [Electrical] stimulation, which can
operate at larger distances, may not require such precise localization
of the seizure focus," Rothman said.
That could be an advantage because some patients'
seizures are more difficult to pinpoint.
The 'Oracle'
Electrical
stimulation and chilling show promise for stopping a seizure once it
starts, but other researchers have in mind a more ambitious challenge.
They seek to predict seizures well before they begin.
Software
advances make it conceivable that a device could detect an unusual EEG
pattern that starts minutes or hours before a seizure actually begins.
It could allow intervention far earlier in the process, perhaps when a
nascent seizure is more easily corrected.
"Many of us believe
that if you wait until the seizure has taken hold, it has already
spread to a larger portion of the neuronal network, and it could be
more difficult to stop," Litt said. "But no trials have clearly
demonstrated that."
Klaus Lehnertz, Ph.D., who heads the
neurophysics group in the department of epileptology at Germany's
University of Bonn Medical Center, has been in the forefront of
developing predictive software. He doesn't believe that standard
statistical methods will be capable of it, because EEG signals, like
the brain that generates them, are constantly changing and adapting. To
tackle the problem, he is turning to cellular neural networks, which
are a little like miniature computers linked to one another, much like
nerve cells are linked. Like nerve cells, the miniature computers
'talk' to each other, and this structural similarity might allow it to
better mimic brain activity than a standard computer.
Lehnertz
reports success in predicting seizures retrospectively - that is,
applying the cellular neural network's prediction software to a range
of already collected EEG data and successfully identifying a
pre-seizure state. Doing it prospectively – using EEG data to predict a
seizure that hasn't happened yet, as would be required if it were used
in a device – is a more difficult challenge.
"I think it's a little too early for that," he
said, but he continued by saying the day will come when it is possible.
Will
prediction and early intervention in an oncoming seizure be more
effective than detecting a seizure and reacting to it? NeuroPace's
Morrell isn't sure.
"I think the ability to predict seizures
would be really helpful in the sense that it would warn individuals,
and hopefully people would know not to drive a car, or to go to a safe
place, or even take medicine prophylacticly," Morrell said. "I have no
idea whether it would be a benefit to provide electrical stimulation to
the brain well in advance, or if it is better to save the stimulation
for the moment that the event starts."
Whether or not
researchers ever succeed in predicting seizures, it seems likely that
devices will play an important role in epilepsy therapy in the coming
years. What lies ahead? Safety is a key concern, says Ivan Osorio,
M.D., who is a professor of neurology at the University of Kansas
Medical Center, and is also working on a closed-loop electrical
stimulation device.
"I think the primary challenge we face is to
demonstrate that implantable devices do not trigger more seizures... or
change the brain in other ways. They may have cognitive or behavioral
effects," Osorio said.
Although they are currently being tested
only in patients that have failed drug therapy, implantable devices may
eventually find use as the frontline therapy for epilepsy. Litt points
to the example of pacemakers. Early clinical trials of the devices were
actually halted because they were so effective that it was deemed
unethical to continue to withhold them from people in the control group.
"Now
the implants are the first-line therapy for this medical condition, and
the market for the drugs has diminished considerably," Litt said.