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Seizure First Aid Training For people with Epilepsy (SAFE) frequently attending emergency departments and their significant others: results of a UK multi-centre randomised controlled pilot trial

Authors :
Elizabeth MacCallum
Adam J. Noble
Steve Goodacre
Anthony G Marson
Myfanwy Morgan
Jane McVicar
Sarah J Nevitt
Emily A. Holmes
Mark Buchanan
Dyfrig A. Hughes
Dee Snape
Catrin Tudur-Smith
Leone Ridsdale
Source :
BMJ Open
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
BMJ Publishing Group, 2020.

Abstract

ObjectiveTo determine the feasibility and optimal design of a randomised controlled trial (RCT) of Seizure First Aid Training For Epilepsy (SAFE).DesignPilot RCT with embedded microcosting.SettingThree English hospital emergency departments (EDs).ParticipantsPatients aged ≥16 with established epilepsy reporting ≥2 ED visits in the prior 12 months and their significant others (SOs).InterventionsPatients (and their SOs) were randomly allocated (1:1) to SAFE plus treatment-as-usual (TAU) or TAU alone. SAFE is a 4-hour group course.Main outcome measuresTwo criteria evaluated a definitive RCT’s feasibility: (1) ≥20% of eligible patients needed to be consented into the pilot trial; (2) routine data on use of ED over the 12 months postrandomisation needed securing for ≥75%. Other measures included eligibility, ease of obtaining routine data, availability of self-report ED data and comparability, SAFE’s effect and intervention cost.ResultsOf ED attendees with a suspected seizure, 424 (10.6%) patients were eligible; 53 (12.5%) patients and 38 SOs consented. Fifty-one patients (and 37 SOs) were randomised. Routine data on ED use at 12 months were secured for 94.1% patients. Self-report ED data were available for 66.7% patients. Patients reported more visits compared with routine data. Most (76.9%) patients randomised to SAFE received it and no related serious adverse events occurred. ED use at 12 months was lower in the SAFE+TAU arm compared with TAU alone, but not significantly (rate ratio=0.62, 95% CI 0.33 to 1.17). A definitive trial would need ~674 patient participants and ~39 recruitment sites. Obtaining routine data was challenging, taking ~8.5 months.ConclusionsIn satisfying only one predetermined ‘stop/go’ criterion, a definitive RCT is not feasible. The low consent rate in the pilot trial raises concerns about a definitive trial’s finding’s external validity and means it would be expensive to conduct. Research is required into how to optimise recruitment from the target population.Trial registration numberISRCTN13871327

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20446055
Volume :
10
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BMJ Open
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....dcdc84c54ed700a4d1c0247b676fe00f