Responsive Neurostimulation (RNS)

 

At least 30% of people do not respond to anti-seizure medicines. Some people can have surgery to remove where seizures start in the brain, though surgery may not be an option for everyone with uncontrolled seizures. For instance, if seizures originate in an area of the brain that cannot be removed or if seizures originate from more than one region in the brain.  

Treat Seizures at Their Source
Brain-responsive neurostimulation with the RNS® System. Image Copyright 2017, NeuroPace, Inc.

One treatment option is the use of responsive neurostimulation. Known as RNS therapy, this type of treatment was approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in 2013. Neurostimulation is a type of treatment used in epilepsy that relies on sending very brief electrical currents to certain structures or areas of the brain to interrupt the electrical current of a seizure. Over time, seizure frequency can decrease from RNS therapy.

To be a candidate for RNS therapy, people must first be evaluated to see if they can benefit from treatment with this device, or if other types of neuromodulation therapies may be more appropriate, such as vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) or deep brain stimulation (DBS). Most comprehensive epilepsy centers that provide epilepsy surgery can offer the RNS® System and perform the detailed testing to see where their seizures arise in the brain. 

The RNS® System is designed to work in 3 key ways:

  • Monitors brain waves at the seizure focus, all the time - even during sleep.
  • Detects unusual electrical activity that can lead to a seizure.
  • Responds quickly (within milliseconds) to seizure activity by giving small bursts or pulses of stimulation.
  • The RNS® System has been approved by the FDA to treat focal seizures in adults 18 years and older.
  • It’s used in addition to seizure medications.  
  • It’s designed for people with drug-resistant epilepsy — meaning a person continues to have seizures despite trials with two seizure medications.
  • It’s used in people who cannot have epilepsy surgery to remove where the seizures start, or resective surgery has not worked. 

A device like the RNS® System changes or modulates brain activity to stop or prevent seizures.

The exact way that the RNS® System works is not known. It is thought to act on a certain substance in the brain called an inhibitory neurotransmitter, which inhibits or stops activity from brain cells that could lead to seizures. This may explain how the RNS works in the short term. Its long-term effect may be caused by something else affecting how brain cells work more broadly. 

Although the RNS® System is not a cure for epilepsy, it has shown to reduce seizures in the majority of people who have used it. So far, these effects appear to improve over time in many people. 

Real world retrospective study:

  • 130 patients with the RNS® System were followed for an average of 2.3 years. The average decrease in seizures was 67% after 1 year, 75% at 2 years, and up to 82% after 3 or more years of using RNS.
  • So far, about 3 out of 4 people with the RNS® System (77%) had their seizures cut in half after 2 years of using it.
  • Some people had extended times of being seizure free as well. In the open label study or long-term study, 1 out of 3 people reported periods of no seizures for 6 months in a row. 

Quality of Life Results

  • Benefits of any therapy must also look at how a person feels and their quality of life.
  • A study of 191 people with the RNS® System found improvements in quality of life aside from seizure control. These benefits did not appear due to changes in seizures or medicines. These included:
    • Physical health
    • Cogntitive functioning (for example thinking, remembering, and concentrating)
    • Emotional health or mood
    • Less worry about seizures
    • Overall quality of life

The RNS® System is manufactured by NeuroPace, Inc. Additional information for patients and physicians is available at their website neuropace.com.

Authored By:

Sloka Iyengar PhD and Patricia O. Shafer RN, MN

on Tuesday, November 28, 2017

Reviewed By:

Adriana Bermeo-Ovalle MD
Sandra Dewar PhD, RN, MS
Stephan U. Schuele MD, MPH

on Tuesday, March 31, 2026

Resources

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