Healthcare Equity in Epilepsy Surgery: Equivalent Outcomes Between NAEC-IV Public Safety-Net and Tertiary Academic Centers in a Major Metropolitan Area

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Abstract

Access to and delivery of quality surgical epilepsy care remains a challenge in both safety-net and private hospital systems. Underserved populations are more likely to utilize safety-net hospital systems, but there are few data on epilepsy surgery outcomes in this setting. We aimed to analyze and compare surgical epilepsy care in a safety-net versus private hospital system. We prospectively collected evaluation and treatment data in patients undergoing resective surgery for epilepsy at a safety-net hospital system and a collaborating private hospital system between 2010-2017. Seizure characteristics, pre-surgical evaluation, perioperative complications, and seizure outcomes were prospectively recorded. Data from 102 patients in the safety-net and 145 patients in the private hospital system were analyzed. There were higher proportions of African American (p=.02) and Hispanic patients (p= .03) in the safety-net hospital system. There was no difference in mean time from epilepsy onset to surgery between groups (p=.54). The presurgical evaluation was equivalent (p>.18), except for more frequent use of magnetoencephalography in the private system (p=.02). Seizure freedom outcomes were excellent, and complication rates were low with no significant differences between groups (p=.95 and p>.22, respectively). However, patients from safety-net hospital systems were more likely to be lost to follow up (p=.04). Quality and equitable surgical epilepsy care can be delivered in a safety-net hospital system despite the higher-minority demographics and intrinsic factors of safety-net hospitals. Partnership of safety-net hospital systems with established comprehensive epilepsy centers and the expansion of these services is essential for healthcare equity in modern epilepsy care.

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License: CC-BY-NC-ND-4.0