Machine learning for the early prediction of infants with electrographic seizures in neonatal hypoxic‐ischaemic encephalopathy

Abstract

Objective

To assess if early clinical and electroencephalographic(EEG) features predict later seizure development in infants with hypoxic-ischaemic encephalopathy(HIE).

Methods

Clinical and EEG parameters<12 hours of birth from infants with HIE across eight European Neonatal Units were used to develop seizure prediction models. Clinical parameters included: intrapartum complications, foetal distress, gestational age, delivery mode, gender, birth weight, Apgar scores, assisted ventilation, cord pH, blood gases. Earliest EEG hour provided a qualitative analysis (discontinuity, amplitude, asymmetry/asynchrony, sleep-wake cycling-SWC) and a quantitative analysis (power, discontinuity, spectral distribution, inter-hemispheric connectivity) from full montage and 2-channel aEEG. Subgroup analysis, only including infants without anti-seizure medication(ASM) prior to EEG was also performed. Machine-learning(ML) models (random forest and gradient boosting algorithms) were developed to predict infants that would later develop seizures and assessed using Matthews Correlation Coefficient(MCC) and area under the receiver operating curve(AUROC).

Results

The study included 162 infants with HIE (53 had seizures). Low Apgar, need for ventilation, high lactate, low base excess, absent SWC, low EEG power, increased EEG discontinuity were associated with seizures. The following predictive models were developed: clinical (MCC 0.368, AUROC 0.681), qualitative-EEG (MCC 0.467, AUROC 0.729), quantitative-EEG (MCC 0.473, AUROC 0.730), clinical and qualitative-EEG (MCC 0.470, AUROC 0.721) and clinical and quantitative-EEG (MCC 0.513, AUROC 0.746). The clinical and qualitative-EEG model significantly outperformed the qualitative-EEG model (MCC 0.470 vs 0.368, p-value 0.037). The clinical and quantitative-EEG model significantly outperformed the clinical model (MCC 0.513 vs 0.368, p-value 0.012). The clinical and quantitative-EEG model for infants without ASM (n=131) had MCC 0.588, AUROC 0.832. Performance for quantitative-aEEG (n=159) was MCC 0.381, AUROC 0.696 and clinical and quantitative-aEEG was MCC 0.384, AUROC 0.720.

Significance

Early EEG background analysis combined with readily available clinical data helped predict infants at highest risk of seizures, hours before they occur. Automated quantitative-EEG analysis was as good as expert analysis for predicting seizures, supporting the use of automated assessment tools for early evaluation of HIE.

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