Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Not yet recruiting
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT05374824 |
Other study ID # |
2021-4532 |
Secondary ID |
RD-2020C2-20356 |
Status |
Not yet recruiting |
Phase |
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
July 1, 2022 |
Est. completion date |
April 1, 2025 |
Study information
Verified date |
May 2022 |
Source |
Ann & Robert H Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago |
Contact |
Sandi Lam, MD MBA |
Phone |
312 227 4220 |
Email |
slam[@]luriechildrens.org |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Observational
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Lennox-Gastaut syndrome is a serious and rare form of epilepsy that begins in infancy and
early childhood. Seizures and their consequences need medical attention, emergency
encounters, and hospitalizations. Seizures disrupt home life for the patient and for family.
Lennox-Gastaut syndrome is typically accompanied by disabilities in motor, communication,
eating, and other skills needed for daily function.
Lennox-Gastaut syndrome (LGS) has no cure. Although current treatments may help reduce the
number of seizures, none are expected to eliminate them entirely; these treatments are
palliative. The main treatments include anti-seizure medications and some surgical
approaches, including the implantation of a vagus nerve stimulator (a pacemaker-like
generator implanted in the chest wall and programmed by a physician to stimulate the vagus
nerve in the neck) and corpus callosotomy (cutting through the band of fibers that connect
the two sides of the brain). While both types of treatment (medications and surgeries)
produce some benefit by reducing how often the seizures occur, both also have some risks. All
medications can, in some patients, produce moderate to severe side effects. This is true of
anti-seizure medications. Most patients with LGS take several anti-seizure medications at a
time. Surgeries can also have associated risks and is additionally stressful for parents and
family members. Currently, there is no strong evidence to support parents and physicians in
deciding which type of treatment (more medicines or surgery) will be most successful for a
child with LGS, and whether one or the other approach may lessen the toll that seizures take
on a child's development and ability to function.
This study has two components. It will engage a network of seven pediatric hospitals in the
United States where children with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome are cared for and determine whether
seizure-related emergency department visits and hospitalizations are more likely to be
reduced following the use of additional medications or adding palliative surgery to existing
medications. The investigators will determine whether medical versus surgical treatment is
more likely to lessen some of the developmental and functional difficulties that affect
patients with LGS. The study will also determine whether starting therapies at a younger
versus older age makes a difference.
The second component of the study will provide a description of the use of surgical versus
medical treatment approaches across 18 pediatric hospitals in the United States (seven plus
11 centers). The investigators will describe how treatments differ across hospitals and over
time.
The results from this study will help parents and providers make more informed choices about
treatment for children with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome and will highlight areas for improvement
in providing the best possible health care for this severe, lifelong disorder.
Description:
Background and Significance: Lennox-Gastaut Syndrome (LGS) is a rare developmental-epileptic
encephalopathy characterized by life-long refractory seizures which result in frequent
utilization of emergency healthcare resources and also contribute to the severe developmental
and functional impairment ubiquitously seen in affected patients. Current treatment pathways
are the addition of anti-seizure medication treatment or palliative surgical procedures
(including neurostimulation), both of which have strong evidence supporting their
effectiveness in reducing seizure frequency, but without cures. No evidence exists about the
comparative effectiveness of these two pathways. Until such evidence is developed, parents
and physicians will continue to struggle with difficult and daunting decisions about whether
to add anti-seizure medications or to pursue palliative surgery, and when to do so.
Study Aims: Determine the comparative effectiveness of adding palliative surgery versus
adding an LGS-approved medication (Aim 1a) for decreasing utilization of seizure-related
emergency health care and (Aim 1b) for limiting the impairment of functional abilities. (Aim
2) Describe the frequency and patterns of utilization of the two therapy pathways at 18
PCORnet sites for variation over time and across sites as well as by patient features - age,
medical fragility, race, ethnicity, and insurance type. In addressing these aims, the study
will assess and improve PCORnet infrastructure and will enhance methods for future studies of
LGS and other rare epilepsies.
Study Description: (Aim 1a) Observational retrospective cohort study of emergency health-care
utilization and (Aim 1b) cross sectional study of the impact of treatment pathways on
functional outcomes. (Aim 2) Retrospective open cohort study of frequency and patterns (by
race, ethnicity, insurance, age) of utilization of the two treatment pathways.