Abstract

Background and objectivesGenetic generalized epilepsy (GGE) is the most common form of generalized epilepsy. Although individual patients with GGE typically present without structural alterations, group differences have been demonstrated in GGE and some GGE subtypes like juvenile myoclonic epilepsy (GGE-JME). Previous studies usually involved only small cohorts from single centers and therefore could not assess imaging markers of multiple GGE subtypes. MethodsWe performed a diffusion MRI mega-analysis in 192 participants consisting of 126 controls and 66 patients with GGE from four different cohorts and two different epilepsy centers. We applied whole-brain multi-site harmonization and analyzed fractional anisotropy (FA), as well as mean, radial and axial diffusivity (MD/RD/AD) to assess differences between controls, patients with GGE and the common GGE subtypes, i.e. GGE with generalized tonic-clonic seizures only (GGE-GTCS), GGE-JME and absence epilepsy (GGE-AE). We also analyzed relationships with patients' response to anti-seizure-medication (ASM). ResultsRelative to controls, we identified decreased anisotropy and increased RD in patients with GGE. We found no significant effects of disease duration, age of onset or seizure frequency on diffusion metrics. Patients with JME had increased MD and RD when compared to controls, while patients with GGE-GTCS showed decreased MD/AD when compared to controls. Compared to patients with GGE-AE, patients with GGE-GTCS had lower AD/MD. Compared to patients with GGE-GTCS, patients with GGE-JME had higher MD/RD and AD. Moreover, we found lower FA in patients with refractory when compared to patients with non-refractory GGE in the right cortico-spinal tract, but no significant differences in patients with active versus controlled epilepsy. DiscussionWe provide evidence that clinically defined GGE as a whole and GGE-subtypes harbor marked microstructural differences detectable with diffusion MRI. Moreover, we found an association between microstructural changes and treatment resistance. Our findings have important implications for future full-resolution multi-site studies when assessing GGE, its subtypes and ASM refractoriness.

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