Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT04290975

Bridging the Childhood Epilepsy Treatment Gap in Africa

Bridging the Childhood Epilepsy Treatment Gap in Africa (BRIDGE)

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
1,672 (actual)
Sponsor
Vanderbilt University Medical Center · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
6 Months – 16 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

About half of the world's children with epilepsy do not receive treatment - known as the epilepsy treatment gap - with significantly higher rates (67%-90%) in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). We will conduct the first cluster-randomized clinical trial (cRCT) to determine the efficacy, implementation, and cost-effectiveness of a novel intervention shifting childhood epilepsy care to epilepsy-trained community health extension workers in an effort to close the epilepsy treatment gap. This research will provide information to help extend epilepsy treatment to children in LMICs and worldwide who suffer from untreated seizures.

Detailed description

Epilepsy is the most common severe neurological disorder among children. Most children with epilepsy, if treated, can live normal lives. Yet among the world's children living with epilepsy, about 80% of whom reside in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), about half do not receive treatment; this is described as "the childhood epilepsy treatment gap." Among the LMICs of Africa, the childhood epilepsy treatment gap is about 67%-90% - unchanged for over twenty years. Although the World Health Organization (WHO) and other health agencies recommend that the epilepsy treatment gap be bridged by task shifting epilepsy care to community health extension workers (CHWs) in primary care settings, this recommendation has not been implemented on a large scale. This failure to scale up task shifting in epilepsy care is due to (a) inadequate evidence of efficacy of task-shifted epilepsy care, (b) a lack of methods and tools for implementing epilepsy task shifting, (c) inadequate understanding of task-shifted epilepsy care barriers, and (d) a lack of cost-effectiveness data for health policymakers. CHWs providing task-shifted epilepsy care must identify children with epilepsy, disadvantaged by stigma and unknown to the healthcare system, who are without access to neurologists or electroencephalograms (EEGs). An epilepsy screening tool in the local language (e.g., Hausa) is therefore essential for epilepsy diagnosis, seizure type classification, and medical management. Hausa, the most commonly spoken language in west Africa, with over 120 million Hausa speakers, is used in daily life, commerce, and education; our proposed study will be conducted in three major cities in Hausa-speaking Africa. Funded by an R21 grant (R21TW010899) in preparation for this cluster-randomized clinical trial (cRCT), we developed and piloted in Kano, Nigeria (a) a scalable epilepsy training program for CHWs, (b) an epilepsy community education program in Hausa to facilitate screening, diagnosis and treatment; and (c) an epilepsy data management system. We also (d) validated an epilepsy screening, diagnosis, and seizure classification tool in Hausa, (e) demonstrated feasibility of screening and enrolling children in a cRCT of task-shifted epilepsy care, and (f) piloted a task-shifted epilepsy diagnosis and management protocol. We will now conduct the first cRCT of task-shifted childhood epilepsy care in Africa with the following specific aims: Conduct a non-inferiority cRCT of a task-shifted childhood epilepsy care protocol compared to enhanced usual care (EUC) in three Hausa-speaking cities in northern Nigeria. We will enroll a maximum of 1800 children (age 6 mo, \<18 yrs) with epilepsy across 60 randomly selected primary healthcare centers (PHCs) in Kano (30 PHCs), Kaduna (16 PHCs) and Zaria (14 PHCs). PHCs will be randomly assigned to intervention (task-shifted to CHWS childhood epilepsy care; 30 PHCs) or EUC (referral to a physician for epilepsy management; 30 PHCs). Primary outcome: we hypothesize that the proportion of children seizure-free for ≥ 6 months at 24 months follow-up (primary outcome) will be similar in the intervention and EUC arms. Secondary outcomes at 24 months include (a) percent seizure reduction from baseline, (b) time to next seizure after 3 months seizure-free, and (c) accuracy of epilepsy diagnosis and seizure type classification by CHWs compared to assessments by physician epilepsy specialists, blinded to the randomization arm. Additional studies of (1) socio-behavioral and implementation outcomes of implementing task-shifted epilepsy care among providers, parents/guardians and patients in the cRCT, and (2) the cost-effectiveness of the task-shifted epilepsy care intervention will performed/completed after completion of the cRCT.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERTask-shifting epilepsy care to epilepsy-trained community health workers (CHWs)Children with previously untreated epilepsy, identified via community-based screening and diagnositic evaluations, receive epilepsy care (including anti-seizure medication management) from epilepsy-trained community health workers (CHWs).
OTHEREnhanced usual care for epilepsy (EUC)Children with previously untreated epilepsy, identified via community-based screening and diagnostic evaluations, receive epilepsy care by physicians, as routinely done in Nigeria. The usual physician care is enhanced by community health workers (CHWs), who do not participate in the child's epilepsy care, but who help families navigate the healthcare system.

Timeline

Start date
2020-06-16
Primary completion
2024-05-31
Completion
2025-07-15
First posted
2020-03-02
Last updated
2026-02-20
Results posted
2026-02-20

Locations

3 sites across 1 country: Nigeria

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04290975. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.