TY - JOUR
T1 - AB082. Navigating barriers to epilepsy surgery
T2 - a national survey of patient and neurologist perspectives
AU - Bakhshi, Saqib Kamran
AU - Tariq, Rabeet
AU - Bajwa, Mohammad Hamza
AU - Gauhar, Fatima
AU - Hammad, Muhammad Bin
AU - Akhtar, Sijal
AU - Nasir, Muhammad Bin
AU - Mirza, Farhan Arshad
AU - Enam, Syed Ather
PY - 2024/8/1
Y1 - 2024/8/1
N2 - BACKGROUND: Potential barriers to epilepsy surgery can be divided into two broad groups: reluctance of patients/caregivers and deficient knowledge of neurologists. Pakistan, in particular, faces an epilepsy surgery treatment gap of 70-94%. This study aimed to assess the knowledge and practice of neurologists and the knowledge of the patients diagnosed with epilepsy to identify the barriers to adequate provision of this modality in Pakistan. METHODS: We conducted a cross-sectional study comprising two surveys. Records of patients diagnosed with epilepsy at our hospital during 2.5 years were retrieved from the Neurophysiology database. The second form was designed for neurologists working in Pakistan. The questionnaires were disseminated via email to neurologists and phone calls to patients. RESULTS: In the patients' survey, we obtained 194 responses from caregivers. The median age of patients was 10 years [interquartile range (IQR): 6-14 years]. We found that 74.2% (n=144) of patients were unaware of surgical options in medically refractory epilepsy (MRE). Therefore, most did not comment on it due to the limited information. Forty-eight patients (24.8%) reported more than 1 seizure per month, and 29 (60.4%) were unaware of the surgical treatment. Seizures were disabling in 88% (n=171) of patients. Patients taking more AEDs were significantly more likely to be aware of surgical options (P=0.001). In the survey from neurologists, only 6.6% (n=4) always discussed epilepsy surgery with MRE patients. Around half of the neurologists, 44.3% (n=27), had never referred a patient for epilepsy surgery. However, 95.1% (n=58) were aware of the under-utilization of epilepsy surgery, and 67.2% (n=41) believed that epilepsy surgery is under-recommended. Almost all neurologists (n=60; 98.4%) believe that comprehensive epilepsy treatment centers are required in the country. CONCLUSIONS: In our survey, we found a lack of awareness in both patients and neurologists to be a major barrier. This contrasts the literature from developed or high-income countries, where physician awareness seems adequate, and stigmas associated with surgery seem to be the major barrier. Multifaceted approaches catered to local concerns are necessary to address these hindrances.
AB - BACKGROUND: Potential barriers to epilepsy surgery can be divided into two broad groups: reluctance of patients/caregivers and deficient knowledge of neurologists. Pakistan, in particular, faces an epilepsy surgery treatment gap of 70-94%. This study aimed to assess the knowledge and practice of neurologists and the knowledge of the patients diagnosed with epilepsy to identify the barriers to adequate provision of this modality in Pakistan. METHODS: We conducted a cross-sectional study comprising two surveys. Records of patients diagnosed with epilepsy at our hospital during 2.5 years were retrieved from the Neurophysiology database. The second form was designed for neurologists working in Pakistan. The questionnaires were disseminated via email to neurologists and phone calls to patients. RESULTS: In the patients' survey, we obtained 194 responses from caregivers. The median age of patients was 10 years [interquartile range (IQR): 6-14 years]. We found that 74.2% (n=144) of patients were unaware of surgical options in medically refractory epilepsy (MRE). Therefore, most did not comment on it due to the limited information. Forty-eight patients (24.8%) reported more than 1 seizure per month, and 29 (60.4%) were unaware of the surgical treatment. Seizures were disabling in 88% (n=171) of patients. Patients taking more AEDs were significantly more likely to be aware of surgical options (P=0.001). In the survey from neurologists, only 6.6% (n=4) always discussed epilepsy surgery with MRE patients. Around half of the neurologists, 44.3% (n=27), had never referred a patient for epilepsy surgery. However, 95.1% (n=58) were aware of the under-utilization of epilepsy surgery, and 67.2% (n=41) believed that epilepsy surgery is under-recommended. Almost all neurologists (n=60; 98.4%) believe that comprehensive epilepsy treatment centers are required in the country. CONCLUSIONS: In our survey, we found a lack of awareness in both patients and neurologists to be a major barrier. This contrasts the literature from developed or high-income countries, where physician awareness seems adequate, and stigmas associated with surgery seem to be the major barrier. Multifaceted approaches catered to local concerns are necessary to address these hindrances.
KW - Epilepsy surgery
KW - global neurosurgery
KW - knowledge gaps
KW - treatment gaps
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85204418574&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.21037/cco-24-ab082
DO - 10.21037/cco-24-ab082
M3 - Article
C2 - 39295400
AN - SCOPUS:85204418574
SN - 2304-3865
VL - 13
SP - AB082
JO - Chinese Clinical Oncology
JF - Chinese Clinical Oncology
ER -