Current Environment:

Summary

Data strongly suggests that aggressive and early treatment of status epilepticus (SE) is crucial for seizure abortion and prevention of long-term neurologic sequelae. We propose the creation of a seizure action plan, an intervention aimed to guide daily medication use, outline pre-hospital seizure first aid and rescue medication use, and direct emergency personnel in patients' individualized SE medication algorithm, with implementation through the electronic medical record. We hypothesize that the seizure action plan will promote daily medication adherence, increase use of home rescue mediation, and improve timeliness of AED (antiepileptic drug) delivery, length of hospital stay, and ICU admission rate in episodes of status epilepticus.

Conditions

Epilepsy, Status Epilepticus

Recruitment Status

Completed

Detailed Description

The purpose of this study is the creation, implementation, and analysis of a seizure action plan, an intervention aimed to guide daily medication use, outline pre-hospital seizure first aide and rescue medication use, and direct emergency personnel in patients' individualized status epilepticus medication algorithm, with implementation through the electronic medical record. After creation of the action plan, the primary neurologist and patient/caregiver will create a patient-specific plan. The action plan will be reviewed and updated as necessary at each regularly scheduled primary neurology clinic visit. Two studies will aim at analyzing the effectiveness of this intervention. A prospective observational cohort study of patient care process and outcomes 18 months before and 18 months after initiation of seizure action plan will analyze patients with status epilepticus requiring hospital admission and/or status epilepticus that occurs during admission at BCH and measure rescue medication prescription and application patterns, timeliness of medication administration during SE, use of appropriately dosed AEDs, rate of intubation, significant hypotension, allergic reaction, and other adverse events, and hospital length of stay and rate of ICU admissions. A second prospective observational cohort study of patient outcome variables 18 months before and 18 months after initiation of a seizure action plan obtained through parent-reported ICISS (Integrated Clinical Information Sharing System)/Trivox data, a web-based platform for tracking symptoms and response to therapy, will measure rescue medication prescription and application patterns, interval seizure frequency, effect on patient and parent quality of life, parent knowledge of AED regimen, and parent self-reported medication adherence.

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

Children aged 1 month to 21 years presenting to Boston Children's Hospital (BCH) with status epilepticus/seizure cluster or who have status epilepticus/seizure cluster during admission at BCH who require antiepileptic(s) for abortion and hospital admission. Status epilepticus is defined as a single seizure lasting 5 minutes or longer; a seizure cluster is defined as 2 or more seizures within 6 hours.
Children aged 1 month to 21 years with known seizure disorder followed at Boston Children's Hospital or satellite clinic and enrolled in TriVox/ICISS Health

Exclusion Criteria: Exclusion criteria include infantile spasms, not requiring AED to resolve, no hospital admission, invasive EEG monitoring, unclear seizure onset or medication administration times, episode of nonconvulsive status epilepticus.

Intervention

Intervention Type

Intervention Name

Other

Seizure Action Plan

Gender

All

Min Age

1 Month

Max Age

21 Years

Download Date

August 6, 2019

Principal Investigator

Tobias Loddenkemper

Primary Contact Information

For more information on this trial, visit clinicaltrials.gov.

Contact

For more information and to contact the study team:

Creation, Implementation, and Analysis of a Seizure Action Plan NCT02995759