Self-management for adults with epilepsy: Aggregate Managing Epilepsy Well Network findings on depressive symptoms

Martha Sajatovic, Erica K. Johnson, Robert T. Fraser, Kristin A. Cassidy, Hongyan Liu, Dilip K. Pandey, Rakale C. Quarells, Peter Scal, Samantha Schmidt, Ross Shegog, Tanya M. Spruill, Mary R. Janevic, Curtis Tatsuoka, Barbara C. Jobst

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

12 Scopus citations

Abstract

Objective: To assess depressive symptom outcomes in a pooled sample of epilepsy self-management randomized controlled trials (RCTs) from the Managing Epilepsy Well (MEW) Network integrated research database (MEW DB). Methods: Five prospective RCTs involving 453 adults with epilepsy compared self-management intervention (n = 232) versus treatment as usual or wait-list control outcomes (n = 221). Depression was assessed with the nine-item Patient Health Questionnaire. Other variables included age, gender, race, ethnicity, education, income, marital status, seizure frequency, and quality of life. Follow-up assessments were collapsed into a visit 2 and a visit 3; these were conducted postbaseline. Results: Mean age was 43.5 years (SD = 12.6), nearly two-thirds were women, and nearly one-third were African American. Baseline sample characteristics were mostly similar in the self-management intervention group versus controls. At follow-up, the self-management group had a significantly greater reduction in depression compared to controls at visit 2 (P <.0001) and visit 3 (P =.0002). Quality of life also significantly improved in the self-management group at visit 2 (P =.001) and visit 3 (P =.005). Significance: Aggregate MEW DB analysis of five RCTs found depressive symptom severity and quality of life significantly improved in individuals randomized to self-management intervention versus controls. Evidence-based epilepsy self-management programs should be made more broadly available in neurology practices.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)1921-1931
Number of pages11
JournalEpilepsia
Volume60
Issue number9
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 1 2019

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
Wiley Periodicals, Inc. © 2019 International League Against Epilepsy

Keywords

  • depression
  • epilepsy
  • quality of life
  • seizures
  • self-management

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