AUTHOR=Hyppönen Jelena , Eronen Henri , Saarela Anni , Koskenkorva Päivi , Mervaala Esa , Kälviäinen Reetta , Jutila Leena TITLE=Clinical utility of semi–automated EEG electric source imaging of interictal discharges in presurgical evaluation and surgical treatment decision making JOURNAL=Frontiers in Neurology VOLUME=Volume 16 - 2025 YEAR=2025 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/neurology/articles/10.3389/fneur.2025.1598265 DOI=10.3389/fneur.2025.1598265 ISSN=1664-2295 ABSTRACT=PurposeWe aimed to evaluate the clinical utility of the semi-automated EEG source imaging (ESI) analysis results during presurgical workup in epilepsy surgery candidates.MethodsForty consecutive presurgical patients with focal epilepsy, evaluated during 2021–2022, with a mean age of 35.0 years (range, 2–59), were included. The long-term video-EEG recordings were analyzed using Epilog PreOp (Clouds of Care, Ghent, Belgium). Automatically detected spike clusters were evaluated, and source localization at the half-rising phase of the averaged spike peak was used for ESI localization at the lobar level. The evaluation by the multidisciplinary epilepsy surgery team (MDT), including clinical and multimodal presurgical evaluation data, was used to assess the clinical utility of ESI results in the decision-making process.ResultsTwenty of 40 patients were classified as non-lesional based on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and 22 of 36 had focal PET hypometabolism. In automated ESI analyses, no epileptic spikes were detected in four patients (10%). The largest spike clusters were localized to the temporal (58%), frontal (23%), and occipital lobes (3%) or the insula (8%). ESI results had an impact on the suggested treatment choice in 45% of cases and did not significantly affect clinical decision-making in 35% of cases. In patients who underwent resective surgery or had MRI lesions in the temporal lobe, ESI findings were more likely to be consistent with other findings and to complement clinical decisions (Pearson chi-square p = 0.016 and 0.027).ConclusionThis study demonstrates that commercial automated spike detection analyses and source localization, when reviewed by an experienced MDT, can aid clinical decision-making in about 40% of patients, especially for patients in whom resective epilepsy surgery is a feasible option.