Disparities across the pediatric epilepsy surgery journey: Referral, recommendation, and completion from a national consortium. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • OBJECTIVE: Despite being safe and effective, surgery for pediatric epilepsy is underutilized. Social determinants of health (SDoH) are important to consider when examining this treatment gap. This study examined the potential systemic inequities at three different stages in the journey toward epilepsy surgery across the Pediatric Epilepsy Research Consortium (PERC). METHODS: Any youth in the PERC prospective surgery database (≤18 years) was eligible and included if sociodemographic factors were also available. We examined if there were differences in disparity factors in: (1) referral to Phase I evaluation, (2) offering of surgery, and (3) completion of surgery. RESULTS: Of 1309 patients, the majority were male (53%, p = .04), White (82.2%, p < .001), not Hispanic or Latino (84.3%, p < .001), and privately insured (56.3%, p < .001). Of the youth who were offered surgical treatment (n = 1103, 84.3%), there were no significant differences in race/ethnicity or sex. Those with a structural lesion were more likely to be offered surgery, and historically marginalized youth were more likely to have a lesion. Of patients who completed surgery (n = 927, 84.0%), White patients were 1.88 times (95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.14-3.04) more likely than Black patients to complete surgery (p = .01). SIGNIFICANCE: Youth who began surgery evaluation are not representative of the demographics of those with epilepsy in the United States, with greater representation of White, non-Hispanic male individuals. In addition, youth who began surgery evaluation disproportionally have private insurance. At the next stage of offering surgery, there were no differences based on SDoH. However, there is evidence that underrepresented youth that were magnetic resonance negative were less likely to be referred for surgical workup and that Black youth were less likely to undergo surgery. Therefore, efforts to provide equitable opportunity for all youth with refractory epilepsy should be concentrated at the referral for surgery evaluation point of care; however, additional efforts are also needed at later stages.

authors

publication date

  • January 24, 2026

Identity

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1002/epi.70060

PubMed ID

  • 41579031