Haneef Zulfi, Patel Kamakshi, Nguyen Angela, Kayal Gina, Martini Sharyl R, Sullivan-Baca Erin
Epilepsy Centers of Excellence, Veteran's Health Administration, USA; Department of Neurology, Baylor College of Medicine, 1 Baylor Plaza, Houston, TX 77030, USA; Neurology Care Line, Michael E. DeBakey VA Medical Center, 2002 Holcombe Blvd, Houston, TX 77030, USA.
Department of Neurology, Baylor College of Medicine, 1 Baylor Plaza, Houston, TX 77030, USA; Neurology Care Line, Michael E. DeBakey VA Medical Center, 2002 Holcombe Blvd, Houston, TX 77030, USA.
Clin Neurol Neurosurg. 2024 Feb;237:108151. doi: 10.1016/j.clineuro.2024.108151. Epub 2024 Feb 5.
Surgical intervention for drug-resistant epilepsy (DRE) is a safe and efficacious evidence-based treatment. Yet, neurologists have historically revealed hesitance in referring patients for surgical evaluations. The present study surveyed general neurologists and epilepsy specialists to assess their views and process in referring patients for specialized epilepsy care and epilepsy surgery.
A 14-item survey assessing epilepsy referrals and views of epilepsy surgery was distributed to all neurologists currently practicing in a large national integrated health system using REDCap. Responses were qualitatively analyzed and differences between general neurologists and epileptologists were assessed using chi-squared tests.
In total, 100 responses were received from 67 general neurologists and 33 epileptologists with several similarities and differences emerging between the two groups. Both groups endorsed surgery and neuromodulation as treatment options in DRE, felt that seizure frequency rather than duration was relevant in considering epilepsy surgery, and indicated patient preference as the largest barrier limiting epilepsy surgery. General neurologists were more likely to require ≥ 3 ASMs to fail to diagnose DRE compared to epileptologists (45% vs. 15%, p < 0.01) who more often required ≥ 2 ASMs to fail. Epileptologists were also more likely than neurologists to try a new ASM (75.8% vs. 53.7%, p < 0.05) or optimize the current ASM (75.8% vs. 49.3%, p < 0.05) in DRE. General neurologists were more likely to consider epilepsy surgery to be less efficacious (p = 0.001) or less safe (p < 0.05).
Overall, neurologists appear to have generally positive opinions of epilepsy surgery, which is a change from prior literature and represents a changing landscape of views toward this intervention. Furthermore, epileptologists and general neurologists endorsed more similarities than differences in their opinions of surgery and steps to referral, which is another encouraging finding. Those gaps that remain between epileptologists and general neurologists, particularly in standards of ASM prescription, may be addressed by more consistent education about DRE and streamlining of surgical referral procedures.
药物难治性癫痫(DRE)的外科干预是一种安全有效的循证治疗方法。然而,从历史上看,神经科医生在将患者转介进行手术评估时一直表现出犹豫。本研究调查了普通神经科医生和癫痫专科医生,以评估他们在将患者转介接受专科癫痫护理和癫痫手术方面的观点和流程。
使用REDCap向一个大型全国性综合医疗系统中目前执业的所有神经科医生发放了一份包含14个条目的调查问卷,评估癫痫转诊和对癫痫手术的看法。对回复进行定性分析,并使用卡方检验评估普通神经科医生和癫痫专家之间的差异。
总共收到了来自67名普通神经科医生和33名癫痫专家的100份回复,两组之间出现了一些异同点。两组都认可手术和神经调节作为DRE的治疗选择,认为在考虑癫痫手术时发作频率而非发作持续时间更为重要,并指出患者的偏好是限制癫痫手术的最大障碍。与癫痫专家相比,普通神经科医生更有可能要求≥3种抗癫痫药物(ASM)治疗失败才能诊断为DRE(45%对15%,p<0.01),而癫痫专家更常要求≥2种ASM治疗失败。在DRE中,癫痫专家也比神经科医生更有可能尝试一种新的ASM(75.8%对53.7%,p<0.05)或优化当前的ASM(75.8%对49.3%,p<0.05)。普通神经科医生更有可能认为癫痫手术疗效较差(p=0.001)或安全性较低(p<0.05)。
总体而言,神经科医生对癫痫手术似乎普遍持积极态度,这与先前的文献有所不同,代表了对这种干预措施看法的不断变化。此外,癫痫专家和普通神经科医生在手术意见和转诊步骤上的相似之处多于不同之处,这是另一个令人鼓舞的发现。癫痫专家和普通神经科医生之间仍然存在的差距,特别是在ASM处方标准方面,可以通过对DRE进行更一致的教育和简化手术转诊程序来解决。