Medical College of Wisconsin
CTSICores SearchResearch InformaticsREDCap

Hospital readmissions in children with new-onset infantile epileptic spasms syndrome. Epilepsia Open 2023 Jun;8(2):444-455

Date

02/16/2023

Pubmed ID

36790214

Pubmed Central ID

PMC10235577

DOI

10.1002/epi4.12711

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-85151994726 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To describe inpatient resource use in the 2 years following infantile epileptic spasms syndrome (IESS) diagnosis, examine the association between clinical/demographic variables and incidence of readmission, and identify risk factors/reasons for frequent readmissions.

METHODS: Retrospective cohort analysis of readmissions (scheduled/unscheduled) within the first 2 years following IESS diagnosis, details of readmissions (number/time between rehospitalizations, and length of stay), demographic/clinical variables, and reasons for readmissions were collected. Negative binomial regression analysis evaluated associations between incidence of readmissions (both scheduled/unscheduled and unscheduled alone) and demographic/clinical factors. Logistic regression assessed the risk of having recurrent readmissions (≥5 readmissions).

RESULTS: Among 93 (60% males) new-onset IESS patients, there were 394 readmissions (56% scheduled and 44% unscheduled) within 2-years following IESS diagnosis. Mean length of stay was 3.5 days (SD: 5.9). Readmissions occurred in 82 patients (88%) and 37 (40%) experienced ≥5 readmissions. On multivariate regression analysis, readmissions were increased with use of multiple first-line treatments for IESS (P = 0.006), technology assistance (P ≤ 0.001), and multispecialty care (P = 0.01); seizure freedom (P = 0.015) and known etiology (P = 0.011) lowered the incidence of readmissions. Examining unscheduled readmissions separately, increased readmissions occurred with public insurance (P = 0.013), technology use (P ≤ 0.0.001), and multispecialty care (P = 0.013); seizure freedom decreased unscheduled readmissions (P = 0.006). Technology assistance (G-tube, NG tube, VP shunt, and tracheostomy use) increased the odds (P = 0.007) for recurrent readmissions. Reasons for readmissions included EEG monitoring (protocol driven for verification of IESS remission/characterization of events/EEG surveillance/presurgical monitoring) (51%), acute medical issues (21%), and seizure exacerbation (15%). Protocol-driven readmissions declined an estimated 52% following protocol modification during the study.

SIGNIFICANCE: In the 2 years following IESS diagnosis, there is substantial inpatient resource use with nearly 40% experiencing ≥5 readmissions (mostly epilepsy related). Since readmissions are increased by intrinsic patient characteristics such as medical complexity (technology use and multispecialty care) or epilepsy-related issues, the preventability of readmissions is uncertain, except for protocol-driven ones.

Author List

Harini C, Yuskaitis CJ, Singh A, McHugh T, Liu S, DeLeo M, Gupta N, Marti C, Zhang B, Libenson MH, Berry JG

Author

Avantika Singh MBBS Assistant Professor in the Neurology department at Medical College of Wisconsin




MESH terms used to index this publication - Major topics in bold

Child
Cohort Studies
Epilepsy
Female
Humans
Male
Patient Readmission
Retrospective Studies
Spasm
Syndrome