One third of children with epilepsy have seizures that are medically intractable. Uncontrolled seizures pose a variety of risks to children, including higher rates of mortality, developmental delay and cognitive impairment. Epilepsy surgery is not a feasible option for most children with refractory epilepsy. The ketogenic diet and the modified Atkins diet have been shown to be effective alternative treatments in children with refractory epilepsy. However, these need parents to be educated, and understand complex instructions of weighing foods and diet preparation. Therefore, children with parents with low levels of literacy and poor socioeconomic status have not been able to benefit from these therapies. Also, the paucity of trained dieticians and limited availability of labeled foods in resource-constraint settings has made these dietary therapies even more inaccessible. This study aimed to to develop a simple-to-administer variation of the modified Atkins diet for use in children with refractory epilepsy and to evaluate the efficacy and tolerability of this simplified modified Atkins diet in children with refractory epilepsy in a randomized controlled open-label trial.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
81
Modified Atkins diet with the following modifications: 1. Pictorial representation of various food items and exchange lists will be provided. 2. Instead of weights, we will provide standardized measures 3. We will calculate the amount of carbohydrates of daily readily available foods in the standardized measures 4. We will formulate recipes and diets based on locally available and culturally acceptable foods. 5. We will develop a parent instruction manual. 6. We will also develop methods for parents with low levels of literacy to maintain seizure logs. This will be done by using bars and color codes. 7. We will develop methods for parents with low levels of literacy to measure and record urine ketones. This will be done by using color codes.
The anti-epileptic drugs will be continued alone for 3 months following which they will be offered Simplified Modified Atkins Diet
Division of Pediatric Neurology, Department of Pediatrics, Lady Hardinge Medical College and Associated Kalawati Saran Children's Hospital
New Delhi, National Capital Territory of Delhi, India
The proportion patients who achieve > 50% seizure reduction from the baseline in the simplified modified Atkins diet plus anti-epileptic drug therapy group at 3 months in comparison to the anti-epileptic drug therapy alone group
Time frame: 3 months
Tolerability and the adverse effects of the simplified modified Atkins diet
Tolerability of the diet and any adverse events will be evaluated by means of parental interview at each visit. Parents will be questioned for the following symptoms - vomiting, lethargy, poor appetite, refusal to feed and constipation in particular. Any other parental concerns will also be noted. The proportion of patients with each symptom in both the groups will be evaluated.
Time frame: 3 months
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