Sunday, November 24, 2013

What changes quality of life in a child with epilepsy? An action plan for families and neurologists.

This study looks at children recently diagnosed with epilepsy and determines their health-related quality of life which can be changed by medications, cognitive problems or behavior, parental depression and family demands.

The objectives of this study were to document trajectories of health–related quality of life (HRQL) and to identify predictors of the trajectory group in children with new–onset epilepsy. Results suggested that children with epilepsy are not homogenous but rather consist of groups with different trajectories and unique predictors of HRQL. Problems associated with child behavior and cognition were the strongest predictors identified. Given that several risk factors are modifiable, it is important to examine these as potential targets within a family–centered framework to improve HRQL of children with new–onset epilepsy.
Methods
  • Data were obtained from the Health Related Quality of Life in Children with Epilepsy Study, a prospective multisite study of children 4–12 years old with new–onset epilepsy followed for 24 months.
  • Health–related quality of life was measured using the Quality of Life in Childhood Epilepsy questionnaire.
  • Trajectories of HRQL were investigated using latent class trajectory modeling.
  • Multinomial logistic regression was used to identify child, parent, and family predictors of HRQL trajectories.
Results
  • A total of 374 families responded at baseline and 283 (76%) completed the study.
  • Five HRQL trajectories were observed: low–increasing (4%), moderate–decreasing (12%), moderate–increasing (22%), high–increasing (32%), and high–stable (30%).
  • Many children in the low–increasing, moderate–increasing, high–increasing, and high–stable had clinically meaningful improvements in HRQL: 82%, 47%, 63%, and 44%, respectively.
  • In contrast, the majority of children in the moderate–decreasing group (56%) experienced clinically meaningful declines in their HRQL.
  • Factors predicting trajectories were number of antiepileptic drugs prescribed, presence of comorbid behavior or cognitive problems, parent depression, and family functioning and demands.
Read more here

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