A survey of the prevalence and patterns of neuropsychological assessment practices across epilepsy surgery centers in India: Toward establishing a national guideline.

Autor: Shah, Urvashi, Rathore, Chaturbhuj, Radhakrishnan, Kurupath, Baheti, Neeraj, Kadaba, Shweta, Sahu, Aparna, Alladi, Suvarna, Chitnis, Sonal, George, Annamma, Bansal, Atma Ram, Murthy, Jagarlapudi M. K.
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Zdroj: Epilepsia Open; Oct2024, Vol. 9 Issue 5, p1670-1684, 15p
Abstrakt: Neuropsychology plays an important role in optimizing epilepsy management, but there are no practice guidelines for low‐ and middle‐income countries with emerging services. The National Epilepsy Surgery Support Activity Network (NESSAN), a national working group that supports and optimizes epilepsy surgery programs in India, explored the present status of pre‐ and post epilepsy surgery neuropsychological assessment practices across India as an initial step in developing national evidence‐based test guidelines. An online survey was conducted using two questionnaires, one for neurologists and the second for neuropsychologists and speech–language pathologists working in epilepsy surgery centers. The questions to neurologists covered the setting, description, and nature of the neuropsychology services provided for adults and children as part of the epilepsy surgery program, and their perceptions about the importance and indications for neuropsychological assessment in epilepsy surgery. The questions to neuropsychologists inquired about their qualifications and training, pre‐ and postsurgical assessment procedures, and domain‐specific cognitive tests and scales for mood, quality of life, and language evaluations. Forty‐three centers responded, and neuropsychology services were available at three fourth of the centers, but a dedicated full‐time neuropsychologist was available in only 16% of centers. Ninety percent of the neurologists considered neuropsychological evaluation an indispensable part of presurgical evaluation. However, only a few of them believed that the results influenced their decision about the extent of resection and ruling against surgery. The survey found considerable heterogeneity in terms of qualifications and training of neuropsychologists, evaluation procedures, test protocols, and normative data that will need to be harmonized to ensure uniform practice across the country. We believe that the results from this survey provide a road map for implementing measures to minimize existing inadequacies and harmonize neuropsychology services in India and as well as in other countries with emerging neuropsychology services. Plain Language Summary: Neuropsychological assessment is an integral part of the pre‐ and post epilepsy surgery evaluations. In India, the National Epilepsy Surgery Support Activity Network (NESSAN), a body of multidisciplinary professionals, conducted a survey to examine existing neuropsychology practices. The responses from 43 centers across the country revealed considerable heterogeneity in tests and few trained and qualified neuropsychologists. In low‐ and middle‐income countries (LMIC) with emerging neuropsychology services, there is a need to have uniform test protocols, specialized training, and guidelines for optimizing neuropsychology services across all the epilepsy surgery centers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index