Functional connectivity is providing new insights into the network nature of epilepsy with growing clinical applications. Our objective was to validate a novel magnetoencephalography-based method to non-invasively measure the epileptic network. We retrospectively identified pediatric and adult patients with refractory focal epilepsy who underwent pre-surgical magnetoencephalography with subsequent intracranial electrographic monitoring. Magnetoencephalography tracings were visually reviewed, and interictal epileptiform discharges ("spikes") were individually marked. We then evaluated differences in whole-brain connectivity during brief epochs preceding the spikes and during the spikes using the Network-Based Statistic to test differences at the network level. In six patients with statistically-significant network differences, we observed substantial overlap between the spike-associated networks and electrographically active areas identified during intracranial monitoring (the spike-associated network was 78% and 83% sensitive for intracranial electroencephalography-defined regions in the irritative and seizure onset zones, respectively). These findings support the neurobiological validity of the spike-associated network method. Assessment of spike-associated networks has the potential to improve surgical planning in epilepsy surgery patients by identifying components of the epileptic network prior to implantation.
Keywords: epilepsy; functional connectivity; intracranial electroencephalography; magnetoencephalography.