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UnknownNCT06310954

Ketogenic Diet in Pediatric Intractable Epilepsy

The Efficacy of Ketogenic Diet in Treating Pediatric Intractable Epilepsy and Its Relationship With Changes in Inflammatory Markers

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
59 (estimated)
Sponsor
Sun Yat-Sen Memorial Hospital of Sun Yat-Sen University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
6 Months – 12 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

This study aims to evaluate the efficacy of a ketogenic diet in treating pediatric intractable epilepsy and to explore its relationship with changes in inflammatory markers. The investigators plan to recruit 59 participants with intractable epilepsy, 39 of whom will receive a combination of ketogenic diet and conventional antiepileptic drugs, while 20 will receive only conventional drugs. The study will assess the impact of the ketogenic diet on epilepsy control and inflammatory markers, hoping to discover new treatment strategies.

Detailed description

Evaluation index 1. Safety: Adverse events related to the ketogenic diet 2. Efficacy evaluation: A. Primary efficacy indicators: brain electrical load index, epilepsy control response rate, inflammatory factor 34 (blood, cerebrospinal fluid) Secondary efficacy indicators: epilepsy seizure-free rate B. Inspection indicators: blood ketone, blood sugar, blood biochemistry testing, etc.; C. Use high-throughput methods to detect absolute counts of cerebrospinal fluid, serum inflammatory factors, and whole blood lymphocyte subpopulations before and after adding a ketogenic diet. Observation indicators 1. Measurement of ketone body levels Monitor blood ketones (beta-hydroxybutyrate) and blood ketones. Recording time: Record three times a day during the baseline period; record the average blood ketone value at each subsequent follow-up observation. 2. Frequency of epileptic seizures The frequency of epileptic seizures was recorded daily during the start-up period. 3. Efficacy evaluation: Main efficacy indicators: epilepsy control response rate, seizure-free rate, inflammatory factor levels Epilepsy control response rate: defined as an absolute reduction of ≥50% in seizure frequency at follow-up compared with baseline =(No attack + Marked effect + Effective)/Total number of cases × 100%. Evaluation of seizure control: No seizures: seizures are completely relieved after treatment; Markedly effective: the number of seizures is reduced by ≥75% after treatment; Effective: the number of seizures is reduced by ≥50% after treatment; Ineffective: the number of seizures is reduced by \<50% after treatment. Seizure-free rate: Seizures were completely controlled at follow-up. = No attack cases/Total number of cases × 100% 4. Safety evaluation Record various adverse events; biochemical monitoring (glucose and lipid metabolism and related tests); other tests: necessary tests according to the condition (blood gas analysis, B-ultrasound, etc.); 5. Physical development Monitor and record height and weight, and conduct physical development evaluation. 6. Cognitive-behavioral development assessment The baseline period, KD weeks 4, 12, and KD week 16 (at the end of the efficacy observation period) were evaluated and recorded using the Gesell score scale.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DIETARY_SUPPLEMENTEarly ketogenic diet combined with conventional pharmacotherapy.This arm of the trial explores the efficacy of an early initiation of the ketogenic diet in conjunction with conventional antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) for children with refractory epilepsy. The intervention aims to evaluate the impact on seizure frequency, and inflammatory markers, and identify patient characteristics predicting a better response to the ketogenic diet, to improve overall therapeutic response rates in refractory epilepsy.
DRUGCommon diet combined with conventional pharmacotherapyParticipants in this arm will receive a standard diet without any ketogenic restrictions, alongside conventional antiepileptic drugs. This comparator aims to assess the standard care's efficacy against the experimental intervention, focusing on seizure control, and inflammatory markers, and identifying patient characteristics associated with treatment responsiveness.We know that drug information for registering clinical information is necessary, but our research design is to add ketogenic diets as a supplementary treatment plan when traditional drug treatment is ineffective. Therefore, in terms of specific drug selection, this is not absolutely the same. Depending on individual differences, the choice of drugs will also vary. Control the number of episodes, time, etc., and everyone uses different drugs. Therefore, we cannot decide on a single drug for comparison like traditional content.

Timeline

Start date
2022-08-11
Primary completion
2024-04-30
Completion
2024-04-30
First posted
2024-03-15
Last updated
2024-03-15

Locations

1 site across 1 country: China

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06310954. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.