Diagnostic performance of neuroimaging modalities for epileptogenic focus localization: A systematic review
Mustafa S. Alhasan, Mohammed Khalil, Ayman S. Alhasan, Ahmed Najjar, Yasir Hassan Elhassan, Abdullah Almaghraby, Omar Alharthi, Seham Hamoud, Muhammed Amir Essibayi, Fabricio Feltrin, Sumit Singh, James Milburn, Ahmed Y. Azzam

TL;DR
This study compares brain imaging techniques for locating seizure origins in patients needing epilepsy surgery, finding that combining multiple imaging methods gives the best results.
Contribution
The study provides a systematic comparison of diagnostic performance across neuroimaging modalities for epileptogenic focus localization.
Findings
Combined multimodal imaging showed highest diagnostic performance (82–100% sensitivity).
MRI is most effective in lesional epilepsy (72–100% sensitivity).
Functional imaging is essential for MRI-negative cases (33–89% sensitivity).
Abstract
Accurate localization of epileptogenic foci remains of significant importance for surgical planning in drug‐resistant epilepsy. Multiple neuroimaging modalities are available; however, their comparative diagnostic performance lacks comparative detailed synthesis. This systematic review aimed to evaluate and compare the diagnostic accuracy of structural MRI, PET imaging, SPECT/SISCOM, and combined multimodal strategies for epileptogenic focus localization. We conducted a systematic review following PRISMA 2020 guidelines, searching PubMed, Scopus, Google Scholar, Cochrane Library, and Web of Science databases up to May 30, 2025. Studies evaluating the diagnostic performance of neuroimaging modalities for epilepsy focus localization with surgical correlation were included. Data extraction focused on sensitivity, specificity, and clinical manner. Quality assessment used QUADAS‐2 criteria.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEpilepsy research and treatment · Functional Brain Connectivity Studies · EEG and Brain-Computer Interfaces
