Sweetspot Mapping in Deep Brain Stimulation: Strengths and Limitations of Current Approaches

Neuromodulation. 2022 Aug;25(6):877-887. doi: 10.1111/ner.13356. Epub 2022 Feb 10.

Abstract

Objectives: Open questions remain regarding the optimal target, or sweetspot, for deep brain stimulation (DBS) in, for example, Parkinson's disease. Previous studies introduced different methods of mapping DBS effects to determine sweetspots. While having a direct impact on surgical targeting and postoperative programming in DBS, these methods so far have not been compared.

Materials and methods: This study investigated five previously published DBS mapping approaches regarding their potential to correctly identify a predefined target. Methods were investigated in silico in eight different use-case scenarios, which incorporated different types of clinical data, noise, and differences in underlying neuroanatomy. Dice coefficients were calculated to determine the overlap between identified sweetspots and the predefined target. Additionally, out-of-sample predictive capabilities were assessed using the amount of explained variance R2.

Results: The five investigated methods resulted in highly variable sweetspots. Methods based on voxel-wise statistics against average outcomes showed the best performance overall. While predictive capabilities were high, even in the best of cases Dice coefficients remained limited to values around 0.5, highlighting the overall limitations of sweetspot identification.

Conclusions: This study highlights the strengths and limitations of current approaches to DBS sweetspot mapping. Those limitations need to be taken into account when considering the clinical implications. All future approaches should be investigated in silico before being applied to clinical data.

Keywords: Deep brain stimulation; probabilistic mapping; sweetspot; voxel-wise statistics.

MeSH terms

  • Deep Brain Stimulation* / methods
  • Humans
  • Parkinson Disease* / therapy