Baca Christine B, Pieters Huibrie C, Iwaki Tomoko J, Mathern Gary W, Vickrey Barbara G
Department of Neurology, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.
Department of Neurology, VA Greater Los Angeles Health Care System, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.
Epilepsia. 2015 Jun;56(6):822-32. doi: 10.1111/epi.12988. Epub 2015 Apr 20.
Although shorter time to pediatric resective epilepsy surgery is strongly associated with greater disease severity, other nonclinical diagnostic and sociodemographic factors also play a role. We aimed to examine parent-reported barriers to timely receipt of pediatric epilepsy surgery.
We conducted 37 interviews of parents of children who previously had resective epilepsy surgery at University of California Los Angeles (UCLA; 2006-2011). Interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed, and systematically coded using thematic analysis by two independent coders, and subsequently checked for agreement. Clinical data, including "time to surgery" (age of epilepsy onset to surgery) were abstracted from medical records.
The mean time to surgery was 5.3 years (standard deviation [SD] 3.8); surgery types included 32% hemispherectomy, 43% lobar/focal, and 24% multilobar. At surgery, parents were on average 38.4 years (SD 6.6) and children were on average 8.2 years (SD 4.7). The more arduous and longer aspect of the journey to surgery was perceived by parents to be experienced prior to presurgical referral. The time from second antiepileptic drug failure to presurgical referral was ≥ 1 year in 64% of children. Thematic analysis revealed four themes (with subthemes) along the journey to surgery and beyond: (1) recognition--"something is wrong" (unfamiliarity with epilepsy, identification of medical emergency); (2) searching and finding--"a circuitous journey" (information seeking, finding the right doctors, multiple medications, insurance obstacles, parental stress); (3) surgery is a viable option--"the right spot" (surgery as last resort, surgery as best option, hoping for candidacy); and (4) life now--"we took the steps we needed to" (a new life, giving back).
Multipronged interventions targeting parent-, provider-, and system-based barriers should focus on the critical presurgical referral period; such interventions are needed to remediate delays and improve access to subspecialty care for children with medically refractory epilepsy and potentially eligible for surgery.
尽管小儿切除性癫痫手术时间越短与疾病严重程度越高密切相关,但其他非临床诊断和社会人口统计学因素也起作用。我们旨在研究家长报告的小儿癫痫手术及时接受的障碍。
我们对曾在加利福尼亚大学洛杉矶分校(UCLA;2006 - 2011年)接受切除性癫痫手术的儿童的家长进行了37次访谈。访谈进行了录音、转录,并由两名独立编码员使用主题分析进行系统编码,随后检查编码一致性。临床数据,包括“手术时间”(癫痫发作年龄至手术年龄),从病历中提取。
平均手术时间为5.3年(标准差[SD]3.8);手术类型包括32%的大脑半球切除术、43%的叶/局灶性手术和24%的多叶手术。手术时,家长平均年龄为38.4岁(SD 6.6),儿童平均年龄为8.2岁(SD 4.7)。家长认为手术过程中更艰巨和耗时的阶段发生在术前转诊之前。64%的儿童从第二种抗癫痫药物失效到术前转诊的时间≥1年。主题分析揭示了手术及术后过程中的四个主题(及子主题):(1)识别——“有问题”(对癫痫不熟悉,识别医疗紧急情况);(2)寻找与发现——“曲折的旅程”(寻求信息,找到合适的医生,多种药物治疗,保险障碍,家长压力);(3)手术是可行选择——“正确的地点”(手术作为最后手段,手术作为最佳选择,希望符合手术条件);(4)现在的生活——“我们采取了必要的步骤”(新生活,回报)。
针对家长、医疗服务提供者和系统层面障碍的多方面干预应聚焦于关键的术前转诊期;需要此类干预来纠正延误,并改善难治性癫痫且可能符合手术条件的儿童获得专科护理的机会。