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RECRUITINGINTERVENTIONAL

Epilepsy Journey-An Executive Functioning Intervention for Teens With Epilepsy

Epilepsy Journey 2.0: An Intervention to Improve Executive Functioning in Adolescents With Epilepsy

Important: This information is not medical advice. Talk to your doctor about whether a clinical trial is right for you.

About This Trial

The goal of this multi-site clinical trial is to determine the effectiveness of two components of a web-based intervention (Epilepsy Journey) to improve executive functioning in adolescents with epilepsy. The two components include web-based modules and problem-solving telehealth sessions with a therapist focused on executive functioning. This trial aims to answer the following questions: 1. Which components of Epilepsy Journey (web-based modules or telehealth sessions with a therapist) are essential for improving executive functioning in adolescents with epilepsy? 2. Which components of Epilepsy Journey (web-based modules or telehealth sessions with a therapist) are essential for improving quality of life in adolescents with epilepsy? Participants will be randomly assigned to one of four groups: 1) Epilepsy Journey web-based modules and telehealth sessions, 2) Epilepsy Journey web-based modules only, 3) telehealth sessions with a therapist only, or 4) treatment as usual. Participants will: * Independently review Epilepsy Journey web-based modules focused on executive functioning skills (\~15-30 minutes) and/or have weekly telehealth sessions (\~30-45 minutes) with a therapist for 14 weeks. * Complete measures of executive functioning (parent and teen-report) and quality of life (teen-report) at the start of the study, 14-, 26-, and 66- weeks after randomization. The NIH toolbox will be completed at the start of the study and 26-weeks after randomization. Additional measures will also be collected.

Who May Be Eligible (Plain English)

Who May Qualify: 1. Age between 13-17 years at the time of enrollment 2. Child lives at home with primary caregiver and is enrolled in school (excluding summer breaks). 3. Confirmed diagnosis of epilepsy with seizures that are categorized as either generalized or focal in onset. Epilepsy is defined as: 1) At least two unprovoked seizures occurring more than 24-hours apart; or 2) One unprovoked seizure and a probability of further seizures similar to the general recurrence risk after two unprovoked seizures. 4. Primary language of English 5. Screening Inclusion: On the parent-reported Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function-2nd edition (BRIEF-2), have executive functioning deficits defined as at least 2 subclinical (60\<T\<65) or one clinical BRIEF-2 subscale T scores (T≥65). 6. Parent/legal guardian(s) willing to sign an IRB approved willing to sign a consent form 7. Participant willing to sign an Institutional Review Board approved assent Who Should NOT Join This Trial: 1. Parent or clinician-reported history in the adolescent of: 1. developmental delay (e.g., autism spectrum disorder, pervasive development disorder, history of services for developmental delay or intellectual impairment in the past 5 years, known IQ\<70) 2. severe mental illness (e.g., schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, eating disorder within the past 12 months, depression with active suicidal ideation or suicidal ideation/intent in the past 3 months) 3. prior (3-months) or current history of trauma and/or stressor-related disorders (e.g. PTSD) 4. recent or current significant medical disease (i.e., cardiovascular, hepatic, renal, gynecologic, musculoskeletal, metabolic or endocrine) 5. brain injury or brain tumor; and/or 6. epilepsy surgery 7. any other medical and/or psychological condition that takes treatment precedence over the study intervention 2. Clinician-reported diagnosis in the adolescent of ...See full criteria on ClinicalTrials.gov Always talk to your doctor about whether this trial is right for you.

Original Eligibility Criteria

View original clinical language
Inclusion Criteria: 1. Age between 13-17 years at the time of enrollment 2. Child lives at home with primary caregiver and is enrolled in school (excluding summer breaks). 3. Confirmed diagnosis of epilepsy with seizures that are categorized as either generalized or focal in onset. Epilepsy is defined as: 1) At least two unprovoked seizures occurring more than 24-hours apart; or 2) One unprovoked seizure and a probability of further seizures similar to the general recurrence risk after two unprovoked seizures. 4. Primary language of English 5. Screening Inclusion: On the parent-reported Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function-2nd edition (BRIEF-2), have executive functioning deficits defined as at least 2 subclinical (60\<T\<65) or one clinical BRIEF-2 subscale T scores (T≥65). 6. Parent/legal guardian(s) willing to sign an IRB approved informed consent 7. Participant willing to sign an Institutional Review Board approved assent Exclusion Criteria: 1. Parent or clinician-reported history in the adolescent of: 1. developmental delay (e.g., autism spectrum disorder, pervasive development disorder, history of services for developmental delay or intellectual impairment in the past 5 years, known IQ\<70) 2. severe mental illness (e.g., schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, eating disorder within the past 12 months, depression with active suicidal ideation or suicidal ideation/intent in the past 3 months) 3. prior (3-months) or current history of trauma and/or stressor-related disorders (e.g. PTSD) 4. recent or current significant medical disease (i.e., cardiovascular, hepatic, renal, gynecologic, musculoskeletal, metabolic or endocrine) 5. brain injury or brain tumor; and/or 6. epilepsy surgery 7. any other medical and/or psychological condition that takes treatment precedence over the study intervention 2. Clinician-reported diagnosis in the adolescent of 1. epilepsy whose seizures are categorized only as either unknown onset or unclassified onset (defined as insufficient information to determine onset) 2. epilepsy currently being treated at the time of enrollment by 3 or more antiseizure medications (ASMs) (excluding rescue medication use) 3. epilepsy with a history of failure to achieve seizure freedom despite adequate use of 4 different anti-seizure medications 4. a confirmed or suspected epileptic encephalopathy (e.g., electrical status epilepticus in sleep, Landau Kleffner syndrome, West syndrome) 5. a confirmed or suspected progressive and degenerative disorder (e.g., mitochondrial disorders, metabolic disorders, autoimmune disorders) 6. one or more episodes of status epilepticus within the 24 weeks prior to enrollment; and/or 7. treatable causes of seizures, for example identified etiologies including metabolic, neoplastic, or active infectious origin. 8. non-epileptic event/seizures 3. Adolescents currently on the ketogenic diet 4. Participation in a trial of an investigational drug or device within 30 days prior to screening

Treatments Being Tested

BEHAVIORAL

Epilepsy Journey web-based modules

Participants assigned to Epilepsy Journey modules will independently review web-based EJ modules focused on executive functioning skills. The modules cover 10 topic areas: Positive Thoughts, Problem-Solving, Initiation, Working Memory, Monitoring, Inhibition, Emotional Control, Organization and Planning, Sleep/Stress, and a Wrap-Up. Participants will complete 10 modules (\~15-30 minutes each session) within a 14-week time frame. The goal is to complete one module per week.

BEHAVIORAL

Telehealth with a therapist

Therapist will cover 10 areas of executive functioning during telehealth sessions, including Positive Thoughts, Problem-Solving, Initiation, Working Memory, Monitoring, Inhibition, Emotional Control, Organization and Planning, Sleep/Stress, and a Wrap-Up. Telehealth sessions with a therapist will occur via HIPAA-compliant videoconference (e.g. Microsoft Teams) each week ideally over the course of 14 weeks.

Locations (3)

Childrens Hospital of Orange County
Orange, California, United States
Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center
Cincinnati, Ohio, United States
Medical University of South Carolina
Charleston, South Carolina, United States