Abstract

Abstract INTRODUCTION Pediatric refractory epilepsy affects quality of life, clinical disability, and healthcare costs for patients and families. We aimed to show the impact of surgical treatment for pediatric epilepsy on healthcare utilization compared to medically treated pediatric epilepsy over 5 yr. METHODS The Pediatric Health Information System database was used to study hospitalized children with epilepsy using five published algorithms. Refractory epilepsy (RE) patients treated with either antiepileptic medications (AEDs) only or AEDs plus epilepsy surgery (ES) between 1/1/2008 and 12/31/2014 were included. Patients with a history of ES before 1/1/2008 or a vagus nerve stimulation implantation surgery were excluded. ICD-9-CM codes were used to identify ES. Healthcare utilization following the index date at 2- and 5-yr including inpatient, emergency department (ED), and all epilepsy-related visits were evaluated. The propensity scores (PS) method was used to match surgically and medically treated patients. Covariates associated with the probability of receiving surgical treatment were chosen in the logistic regression model for calculating PS. SAS 9.4 and Stata 14.0 were used for data management and statistical analysis. RESULTS A total of 2106 (17.1%) and 10186 (82.9%) were surgically and medically treated, respectively. A total of 4050 matched cases, 2025 per each treated group, were included. Overall survival rates of matched cases were 98.07% and 99.58% at 2-yr and 96.66% and 98.99% at 5-yr for medically and surgically treated patients, respectively. Within 5-yr follow-up, seizure-associated healthcare utilization was lower for the surgically treated group: number of inpatient visits were 3.9 vs 2.5 and ED visits were 3.2 vs 1.7 for medically and surgically treated patients, respectively. The number of AEDs at 1-yr follow-up was significantly lower for the surgically treated group (3.22 decreased to 2.59: surgical group, 3.24 decreased to 3.06: medical group). CONCLUSION We found a significant decrease in inpatient and ED visits and number of antiepileptic drug prescriptions, as well as higher survival rates, at 2- and 5-yr follow-up in the surgically treated group compared to the medically treated group for pediatric patients with refractory epilepsy. Pediatric epilepsy surgery can provide beneficial outcomes, favorable long-term effectiveness, and reduced healthcare utilization compared to medical management.

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