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Clinical and Economic Burden of Uncontrolled Epilepsy: Analyses From a Medicaid Database and a Private Health Plan Database

GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) logo

GlaxoSmithKline (GSK)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Epilepsy

Treatments

Drug: Anti-epileptic drug (AED)

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Industry

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

Antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) are the main therapeutic option for patients with epilepsy; however, complete seizure control remains elusive for many patients. Uncontrolled or refractory epilepsy is associated with a higher risk of mortality, physical injuries, and depression or anxiety compared with patients with controlled epilepsy. Higher resource utilization for patients with poor control is likely to be associated with higher economic costs. While diagnostic criteria for uncontrolled epilepsy are debated by neurologists, recent studies suggest that a diagnosis of uncontrolled epilepsy requires 1.) at least one seizure per month and 2.) a history of drug failures.

The objective of this study is to identify patients with uncontrolled epilepsy in both a Medicaid database and a private health plan database, to describe patient characteristics and AED treatment patterns between cohorts of patients with uncontrolled versus well-controlled epilepsy, and to evaluate the economic burden of uncontrolled versus well-controlled epilepsy.

For this evaluation, the data sources are medical and pharmacy claims in Medicaid databases from Florida (Third quarter 1997 to second quarter 2008), Iowa (First quarter 1998 to second quarter 2006), Kansas (First quarter 2001 to second quarter 2009), Missouri (First quarter 1997 to second quarter 2008) and New Jersey (First quarter 1997 to fourth quarter 2008) and medical and pharmacy claims in an private health plan database.

The study design is a retrospective, longitudinal, matched-cohort study. Eligible patient records will be assigned to one of three mutually-exclusive cohorts: uncontrolled epilepsy (at least 2 consecutive changes in AED therapy in at least 30 days, and at least 1 epilepsy-related inpatient or emergency department (ED) visit within 365 days), well-controlled epilepsy (no AED changes and no epilepsy-related inpatient or ED visits), and intermediate epilepsy (not classified as uncontrolled or well-controlled).

Enrollment

12,386 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • At least 18 years of age at the initiation of anti-epileptic drug (AED) treatment as noted in the database
  • A record of at least one medical visit with a diagnosis of epilepsy (ICD-9-CM 345.xx) or at least two diagnoses of non-febrile convulsions (ICD-9-CM 780.30 or 780.39) occuring more than 30 days apart
  • At least one pharmacy claim for an anti-epileptic drug (AED)
  • Continuous enrollment throughout the observation period (minimum of 365 days). Patients with gaps in Medicaid enrollment will be observed only during their period of continuous enrollment, provided that all the above criteria are met

Exclusion criteria

  • Age less than 18 years

Trial design

12,386 participants in 6 patient groups

Medicaid patients with uncontrolled epilepsy
Description:
Database records for patients with 2 or more consecutive changes in anti-epileptic drug (AED) therapy occurring at least 30 days apart and followed by 1 or more epilepsy-related inpatient or emergency department (ED) visits within the 365 days
Treatment:
Drug: Anti-epileptic drug (AED)
Medicaid patients with well-controlled epilepsy
Description:
Database records for patients with an epilepsy diagnosis but no AED change and no epilepsy-related inpatient or ED visits
Treatment:
Drug: Anti-epileptic drug (AED)
Medicaid patients with intermediate epilepsy
Description:
Database records for patients who are not classified as uncontrolled or well-controlled
Treatment:
Drug: Anti-epileptic drug (AED)
Patients in a private health plan with uncontrolled epilepsy
Description:
Database records for patients with 2 or more consecutive changes in AED therapy occuring at least 30 days apart and followed by 1 or more epilepsy-related inpatient or ED visits within 365 days
Treatment:
Drug: Anti-epileptic drug (AED)
Patients in a private health plan with well-controlled epileps
Description:
Database records for patients with an epilepsy diagnosis but no AED change and no epilepsy-related inpatient or ED visits
Treatment:
Drug: Anti-epileptic drug (AED)
Patients in a private health plan with intermediate epilepsy
Description:
Database records for patients who are not classified as uncontrolled or well-controlled
Treatment:
Drug: Anti-epileptic drug (AED)

Trial contacts and locations

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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