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Epilepsy Adherence in Children and Technology (eACT)

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center logo

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

Status

Completed

Conditions

Epilepsy

Treatments

Behavioral: Automated digital reminders
Behavioral: Problem-solving mHealth module
Behavioral: Education microlearning sessions
Behavioral: Individualized Adherence Feedback Report

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT03817229
R01NR017794-01A1 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)
FP00001781

Details and patient eligibility

About

Fifty-eight percent of children with new-onset epilepsy do not take their antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) as prescribed, which is associated with continued seizures, mortality, poor quality of life, and high healthcare costs. Evidence-based adherence interventions are lacking and critically needed, especially for children with epilepsy, who represent an underserved population in pediatrics. The current proposal is a mHealth sequential, multiple assignment, randomized trial (SMART) focused on providing education, automated digital reminders, and individualized adherence feedback, as well as teaching problem-solving skills, with the goal of improving adherence and quality of life and decreasing seizures and health care utilization.

Full description

Non-adherence to antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) is a common problem (i.e., 58% of patients have some level of non-adherence) for young children with newly diagnosed epilepsy, with potentially devastating consequences. AED non-adherence is associated with a 3-fold increased risk of seizures, poor quality of life, inaccurate clinical decision-making, and higher health care utilization and costs. One of the primary barriers to adherence is forgetting, which may be particularly amenable to mHealth (mobile technology in healthcare) interventions. Despite the critical need to develop and implement interventions to improve adherence, there are few family-based interventions for young children with epilepsy and their families. One existing intervention is highly promising; however, this intervention requires six in-person sessions, which can be impossible for families who lack routine access to tertiary specialty care due to time, financial, or transportation constraints. Thus, unmet medical and psychosocial needs of the underserved pediatric epilepsy population are perpetuated and compounded by limited access to this state of the art care. The overall goal is to test a mHealth adherence intervention that is easily accessible using a stepped up care model based on individual needs. This stepped up care model will conserve patient, family, and provider time, costs and resources. The aim of this multi-site R01 is to conduct a two-stage, sequential, multiple assignment, randomized trial (SMART) to evaluate the effectiveness of mHealth intervention strategies for improving AED adherence in caregivers of young children with epilepsy. A two-month baseline period will be followed by two stages. In Stage 1 (3-months long), non-adherent caregivers (< 95%) will be randomized to a mHealth education module and automated digital reminders (control) or the mHealth education module, automated digital reminders, and individualized adherence feedback based on real-time adherence monitoring (treatment) to address the primary barrier of forgetting. At the beginning of Stage 2 (two months long), caregivers randomized to treatment who do not achieve adherence > 95% (response) by the end of Stage 1 will be re-randomized to either continued individualized adherence feedback or individualized adherence feedback augmented with two mHealth problem-solving modules (translated from the PIs existing RCTs) with a therapist. Thus, there are three intervention strategies embedded in this SMART: #1 control, #2 treatment, and #3 problem-solving augmented treatment if nonresponsive at three months. The primary outcome is electronically-monitored adherence and secondary outcomes include seizure severity/frequency, quality of life, and healthcare utilization. If the aims of the project are achieved, this study would have a large impact on pediatric epilepsy, with the potential to change clinical practice for treating non-adherence. The SMART design would allow the investigators to identify patients who are most likely to respond to interventions and step up care with more time- and resource-intensive interventions (i.e., problem-solving with a therapist via the web), when necessary.

Enrollment

268 patients

Sex

All

Ages

2 to 12 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Children ages 2-12 years
  2. Epilepsy diagnosis < 2 years
  3. Ability to read/speak English

Exclusion criteria

  1. Major comorbid neurodevelopmental or medical disorders (e.g., Autism, diabetes)
  2. Plan to wean AEDs for 18 months

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

268 participants in 3 patient groups

Control Group
Active Comparator group
Description:
mHealth education module and automated digital reminders
Treatment:
Behavioral: Education microlearning sessions
Behavioral: Automated digital reminders
Treatment Group-Individualized Feedback Only
Experimental group
Description:
mHealth education module, automated digital reminders, and individualized adherence feedback.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Individualized Adherence Feedback Report
Behavioral: Education microlearning sessions
Behavioral: Automated digital reminders
Treatment Group-Individualized Feedback + Problem-Solving
Experimental group
Description:
mHealth education module, automated digital reminders, individualized adherence feedback, and 2 problem solving sessions with a therapist.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Individualized Adherence Feedback Report
Behavioral: Education microlearning sessions
Behavioral: Problem-solving mHealth module
Behavioral: Automated digital reminders

Trial documents
3

Trial contacts and locations

4

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Central trial contact

Leigh Ann Chamberlin; Avani Modi, Ph.D.

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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