Abstract

BackgroundMental health disorders in the context of long-term conditions in children and young people are currently overlooked and undertreated. Evidence-based psychological treatments for common childhood mental health disorders (anxiety, depression and disruptive behaviour disorders) have not been systematically evaluated in young people with epilepsy despite their high prevalence in this population. The aim of this multi-site randomised controlled trial is to determine the clinical and cost-effectiveness of adding a modular psychological intervention to usual care for the mental health disorders in comparison to assessment-enhanced usual care alone.MethodsIn total, 334 participants aged 3–18 years attending epilepsy services will be screened for mental health disorders with the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ) and the diagnostic Development and Wellbeing Assessment (DAWBA). Those identified as having a mental health disorder and consenting to the trial will be randomised to either receive up to 22 sessions of the modular psychological intervention (MATCH-ADTC) delivered over the telephone over 6 months by non-mental health professionals in addition to usual care or to assessment-enhanced usual care alone. Outcomes will be measured at baseline, 6 months and 12 months post-randomisation. It is hypothesised that MATCH-ADTC plus usual care will be superior to assessment-enhanced usual care in improving emotional and behavioural symptoms. The primary outcome is the SDQ reported by parents at 6 months. Secondary outcomes include parent-reported mental health measures such as the Revised Children’s Anxiety and Depression Scale, quality of life measures such as the Paediatric Quality of Life Inventory and physical health measures such as the Hague Seizure Severity Scale. Outcome assessors will be blinded to group assignment. Qualitative process evaluations and a health economic evaluation will also be completed.DiscussionThis trial aims to determine whether a systematic and integrated approach to the identification and treatment of mental health disorders in children and young people with epilepsy is clinically and cost-effective. The findings will contribute to policies and practice with regard to addressing mental health needs in children and young people with other long-term conditions.Trial registrationISRCTN ISRCTN57823197. Registered on 25 February 2019.

Highlights

  • Mental health disorders in the context of long-term conditions in children and young people are currently overlooked and undertreated

  • MATCH-ADTC in addition to usual care The epilepsy-specific version of MATCH-ADTC used in the trial is a personalised modular cognitive-behavioural intervention with epilepsy-relevant content integrated throughout and an additional epilepsy-specific focus area, including an epilepsy-specific compulsory module and three optional epilepsy-related modules delivered over the telephone/video conferencing for young people attending epilepsy clinics who meet diagnostic criteria for a DSM-5 mental health disorder, in addition to usual care

  • The protocol and all agreed substantial protocol amendments will be documented and submitted for ethical approval prior to Discussion This protocol sets out the rationale and methods for evaluating the impact of adding a modular psychological intervention to usual care for young people with mental health disorders in the context of epilepsy

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Summary

Methods

334 participants aged 3–18 years attending epilepsy services will be screened for mental health disorders with the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ) and the diagnostic Development and Wellbeing Assessment (DAWBA). Those identified as having a mental health disorder and consenting to the trial will be randomised to either receive up to 22 sessions of the modular psychological intervention (MATCH-ADTC) delivered over the telephone over 6 months by non-mental health professionals in addition to usual care or to assessmentenhanced usual care alone. The primary outcome is the SDQ reported by parents at 6 months. Qualitative process evaluations and a health economic evaluation will be completed

Discussion
Statistical methods
Findings
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