Epilepsy Currents - Episode 11 -"TRADEOFFS: What Are Patient-Reported Outcome Measures Missing?" Podcast By  cover art

Epilepsy Currents - Episode 11 -"TRADEOFFS: What Are Patient-Reported Outcome Measures Missing?"

Epilepsy Currents - Episode 11 -"TRADEOFFS: What Are Patient-Reported Outcome Measures Missing?"

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Join Dr. Bermeo in a conversation with Dr. Danielle Becker, Dr. Jacqueline French and Dr. Ammar Kheder as they discuss the article, "TRADEOFFS: What Are Patient-Reported Outcome Measures Missing?" Click here to read the article. This podcast was sponsored by UCB. We'd like to acknowledge Epilepsy Currents podcast editor Dr. Adriana Bermeo-Ovalle, contributing editor Dr. Rohit Marawar, and the team at Sage. The episode focuses on epilepsy outcomes that matter beyond seizure counts alone, using two 2025 papers and a related commentary to rethink how success should be measured in epilepsy care. Validation of the Seizure-Related Impact Assessment Scale by Dr. French and authors introduces a brief patient-reported tool that captures how many days are lost to seizures and how many are lost to treatment side effects. More Than Seizure Control: Multi-Dimensional Outcome Reporting in Epilepsy (MORE) as a patient-centered framework, redefining success in treatment by Dr. Kheder proposes a broader framework that combines seizure control, quality of life, and the patient's own experience of treatment. The commentary by Dr. Becker, TRADE-OFFS: What Are Patient-Reported Outcome Measures Missing?, ties these ideas together by emphasizing that better seizure control is not always a true success if it comes with worse cognition, mood, fatigue, or day-to-day functioning. The overall message is that epilepsy treatment should be judged not only by fewer seizures, but by whether life is actually better. Key Takeaways Seizure counts alone do not capture treatment success Across the discussion, a major point was that patients often care just as much, or more, about cognition, mood, side effects, independence, work, driving, and daily function as they do about seizure frequency. SERIAS measures the real-life impact of seizures and side effects Validation of the Seizure-Related Impact Assessment Scale highlights a simple tool that asks how many days, or parts of days, were disrupted by seizures and separately by treatment-related adverse effects. This helps clinicians see the net impact of treatment rather than focusing only on seizure reduction. MORE broadens outcome measurement beyond seizure control More Than Seizure Control: Multi-Dimensional Outcome Reporting in Epilepsy (MORE) as a patient-centered framework, redefining success in treatment proposes a structured way to combine seizure control, quality of life, and patient experience, so that meaningful improvement is recognized even when seizure reduction is modest. The commentary frames these issues as trade-offs TRADE-OFFS: What Are Patient-Reported Outcome Measures Missing? emphasizes that every treatment decision should consider what is gained and what is lost. A patient may have fewer seizures but worse fatigue, worse memory, heavier medication burden, or new social and functional problems. These approaches could improve both clinic care and research trials The discussion suggests that tools like SERIAS and frameworks like MORE could help with medication decisions, surgical counseling, neuromodulation follow-up, and clinical trials by capturing outcomes that matter most to patients in everyday life. Adriana Bermeo-Ovalle, MD (Host): What if the most difficult part of living with epilepsy is not the seizures? Most people living with epilepsy report being more burdened by stigma, social limitations, and psychiatric comorbidities than by seizures themselves. So, the real question becomes: how do we measure the impact of epilepsy and the success of our treatments beyond side effects and seizure counts? UCB is the proud sponsor of Episode 11 of Epilepsy Currents Podcast. I am the senior podcast editor for Epilepsy Currents, the official journal of the American Epilepsy Society. Today, we will be discussing the epilepsy outcomes beyond seizures with a phenomenal panel of speakers. Let me first introduce our own Epilepsy Currents contributing editor, Dr. Danielle Becker, who's a recurrent guest in our Epilepsy Currents podcast. Dr. Becker wrote a commentary titled TRADE-OFFS: What Are Patient‑Reported Outcome Measures Missing? This commentary was published in October 2025. Dr. Becker, welcome back. Danielle Becker, MD, MS: Thank you so much for having me. Host: It is also my pleasure to welcome Dr. Jackie French, senior author of one of the studies which inspired that commentary published in Neurology in August 2025, titled Validation of the Seizure-Related Impact Assessment Scale. Dr. French is Professor of Neurology in the Comprehensive Epilepsy Center at NYU Grossman School of Medicine and Founder and Director of the Epilepsy Study Consortium and leader of multiple initiatives in our epilepsy community. Dr. French, welcome. It is a pleasure to have you. Jacqueline French, MD: It's great to be here. Thanks a lot for inviting me. Host: And last but not least, I am very happy to introduce Dr. Ammar Kheder, who wrote a second paper referenced also in Dr. Becker's...
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