A new high-tech bracelet, developed by scientists from the Netherlands, detects 85 percent of all severe nighttime epilepsy seizures. That is a much better score than any other technology currently available.
The researchers involved think that this bracelet can reduce the worldwide number of unexpected nighttime fatalities in epilepsy patients.
They published the results of a prospective trial in the scientific journal Neurology.
SUDEP, sudden unexpected death in epilepsy, is a major cause of mortality in epilepsy patients. People with an intellectual disability and severe therapy resistant epilepsy, may even have a 20 percent lifetime risk of dying from epilepsy.
Although there are several techniques for monitoring patients at night, many attacks are still being missed.
Consortium researchers have therefore developed a bracelet that recognizes two essential characteristics of severe attacks: an abnormally fast heartbeat, and rhythmic jolting movements. In such cases, the bracelet will send a wireless alert to carers or nurses.
The research team prospectively tested the bracelet, known as Nightwatch, in 28 intellectually handicapped epilepsy patients over an average of 65 nights per patient. The bracelet was restricted to sounding an alarm in the event of a severe seizure.
The patients were also filmed to check if there were any false alarms or attacks that the Nightwatch might have missed.
This comparison shows that the bracelet detected 85 percent of all serious attacks and 96 percent of the most severe ones (tonic-clonic seizures), which is a particularly high score.
For the sake of comparison, the current detection standard, a bed sensor that reacts to vibrations due to rhythmic jerks, was tested at the same time. This signaled only 21 percent of serious attacks. On average, the bed sensor therefore remained unduly silent once every 4 nights per patient.
The Nightwatch, on the other hand, only missed a serious attack per patient once every 25 nights on average. Furthermore, the patients did not experience much discomfort from the bracelet and the care staff were also positive about the use of the bracelet.
These results show that the bracelet works well, says neurologist and research leader Prof. Dr. Johan Arends. The Nightwatch can now be widely used among adults, both in institutions and at home.
Arends expects that this may reduce the number of cases of SUDEP by two-thirds, although this also depends on how quickly and adequately care providers or informal carers respond to the alerts. If applied globally, it can save thousands of lives.
The Nightwatch was developed by a consortium with the following members: Kempenhaeghe epilepsy centre, Eindhoven University of Technology, the Foundation for Epilepsy Institutions in the Netherlands (SEIN), UMC Utrecht, the Epilepsy Fund, patient representatives and LivAssured. This company has been established to market the Nightwatch and has been involved in the R&D since 2014.
The creation of the Nightwatch was initiated by Kempenhaeghe and Eindhoven University of Technology. The development has taken some 20 years. Its principle is based on an idea of Arends and some of his colleagues.
Whereas the Nightwatch still generates separate alarms based on the two sensors (heart rate sensor and motion sensor), the Tele-epilepsy Consortium is already investigating how the two can work intelligently together to achieve even better alerts.
The consortium is also working on improving alarm systems based on sound and video, which can be combined with alarm systems via the bracelet in the future. In time, the aim is to make the interpretation of the signals patient-specific.