Epileptic seizure detection using heart rate variability from ambulatory ECG: a pseudoprospective study

Authors: Jieying Li, Ewan S Nurse, David B Grayden, Mark J Cook and Philippa J Karoly
Journal of Neural Engineering Open

Abstract

Objective

Seizure detection algorithms enable clinicians to accurately assess seizure burden for epilepsy diagnosis and long-term management. State-of-the-art algorithms rely on electroencephalography (EEG) data to identify electrographic seizures. Previous research that used non-EEG signals, such as electrocardiography (ECG) and wristband data, were collected in epilepsy monitoring units. We aimed to investigate the feasibility of ECG seizure detection in ambulatory settings.

Approach

We developed a patient-independent, machine learning-based seizure detector using ambulatory long-term ECG monitoring data. The model was trained on long-term studies of 47 patients and evaluated pseudoprospectively using event detection on a hold-out test set of 18 patients.

Main results

In the hold-out test set, the seizure detector performed better than chance for 14 out of 18 patients. The average sensitivity was 72% and the average specificity was 68% for the whole test cohort. Overall, across training and test sets, the performance was better for patients diagnosed with focal epilepsy and for patients who were identified as responders (had substantial heart rate changes during seizures).

Significance

Key contributions of this study include the development of a patient-independent seizure detector using ambulatory data and the introduction of a pseudoprospective evaluation framework, which can benefit chronic ambulatory seizure monitoring.