Home recording of 3 Hz spike‐wave discharges in adults with absence epilepsy using the wearable Sensor Dot

Abstract: Objective
Home monitoring of 3-Hz spike–wave discharges (SWDs) in patients with refractory absence epilepsy could improve clinical care by replacing the inaccurate seizure diary with objective counts. We investigated the use and performance of the Sensor Dot (Byteflies) wearable in persons with absence epilepsy in their home environment.

Methods
Thirteen participants (median age = 22 years, 11 female) were enrolled at the university hospitals of Leuven and Freiburg. At home, participants had to attach the Sensor Dot and behind-the-ear electrodes to record two-channel electroencephalogram (EEG), accelerometry, and gyroscope data. Ground truth annotations were created during a visual review of the full Sensor Dot recording. Generalized SWDs were annotated if they were 3 Hz and at least 3 s on EEG. Potential 3-Hz SWDs were flagged by an automated seizure detection algorithm, (1) using only EEG and (2) with an additional postprocessing step using accelerometer and gyroscope to discard motion artifacts. Afterward, two readers (W.V.P. and L.S.) reviewed algorithm-labeled segments and annotated true positive detections. Sensitivity, precision, and F1 score were calculated. Patients had to keep a seizure diary and complete questionnaires about their experiences.

Results
Total recording time was 394 h 42 min. Overall, 234 SWDs were captured in 11 of 13 participants. Review of the unimodal algorithm-labeled recordings resulted in a mean sensitivity of .84, precision of .93, and F1 score of .89. Visual review of the multimodal algorithm-labeled segments resulted in a similar F1 score and shorter review time due to fewer false positive labels. Participants reported that the device was comfortable and that they would be willing to wear it on demand of their neurologist, for a maximum of 1 week or with intermediate breaks.

Significance
The Sensor Dot improved seizure documentation at home, relative to patient self-reporting. Additional benefits were the short review time and the patients' device acceptance due to user-friendliness and comfortability

Location
Deutsche Nationalbibliothek Frankfurt am Main
Extent
Online-Ressource
Language
Englisch
Notes
Epilepsia. - 65, 2 (2024) , 378-388, ISSN: 1528-1167

Classification
Medizin, Gesundheit

Event
Veröffentlichung
(where)
Freiburg
(who)
Universität
(when)
2023
Creator
Swinnen, Lauren
Chatzichristos, Christos
Bhagubai, Miguel
Broux, Victoria
Zabler, Nicolas
Dümpelmann, Matthias
Schulze-Bonhage, Andreas
Vos, Maarten de
Paesschen, Wim van

DOI
10.1111/epi.17839
URN
urn:nbn:de:bsz:25-freidok-2418302
Rights
Open Access; Der Zugriff auf das Objekt ist unbeschränkt möglich.
Last update
14.08.2025, 11:03 AM CEST

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Associated

Time of origin

  • 2023

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