Racial disparities in the utilization of invasive neuromodulation devices for the treatment of drug‐resistant focal epilepsy

Author:

Alcala‐Zermeno Juan Luis12ORCID,Fureman Brandy3ORCID,Grzeskowiak Caitlin L.3ORCID,Potnis Ojas3ORCID,Taveras Maria4,Logan Margaret W.3ORCID,Rybacki Delanie3,Friedman Daniel4ORCID,Lowenstein Daniel5ORCID,Kuzniecky Ruben6ORCID,French Jacqueline34ORCID,

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology, Jefferson Comprehensive Epilepsy Center Thomas Jefferson University Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA

2. Department of Neurology, Mayo Clinic Rochester Minnesota USA

3. Research and New Therapies, Epilepsy Foundation Bowie Maryland USA

4. Department of Neurology, Comprehensive Epilepsy Center NYU Langone Health New York New York USA

5. Department of Neurology University of California, San Francisco San Francisco California USA

6. Department of Neurology Zucker Hofstra School of Medicine, Northwell Health New York New York USA

Abstract

AbstractRacial disparities affect multiple dimensions of epilepsy care including epilepsy surgery. This study aims to further explore these disparities by determining the utilization of invasive neuromodulation devices according to race and ethnicity in a multicenter study of patients living with focal drug‐resistant epilepsy (DRE). We performed a post hoc analysis of the Human Epilepsy Project 2 (HEP2) data. HEP2 is a prospective study of patients living with focal DRE involving 10 sites distributed across the United States. There were no statistical differences in the racial distribution of the study population compared to the US population using census data except for patients reporting more than one race. Of 154 patients enrolled in HEP2, 55 (36%) underwent invasive neuromodulation for DRE management at some point in the course of their epilepsy. Of those, 36 (71%) were patients who identified as White. Patients were significantly less likely to have a device if they identified solely as Black/African American than if they did not (odds ratio = .21, 95% confidence interval = .05–.96, p = .03). Invasive neuromodulation for management of DRE is underutilized in the Black/African American population, indicating a new facet of racial disparities in epilepsy care.

Publisher

Wiley

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