Of the 98 patients, the most prevalent seizure type was focal at 49% (n=46), unknown type 41% (n=40) and generalized 12% (n=12). Sixty nine percent of patients had a history of generalized tonic-clonic seizure (n=68), 21% (n=21) had seizure clusters and 15% (n=15) status epilepticus, with a combined total of 74% of patients (n=73) having at least one of the three. Out of 98 patients, 18% (n=18) were prescribed seizure rescue medications: seven received clonazepam, nine intranasal midazolam and two intranasal diazepam. Most patients had insurance coverage, 43% commercial, 33% Medicare and/or 31% Medicaid.
Based on questionnaire results from epileptologists, neurologists, pharmacists, and advanced practice providers, there was agreement on the use of rescue medication for patients with prolonged seizures (100%), seizure clusters (92%), and history of status epilepticus (90%) however less often for focal epilepsy with rare GTC (49%) or single prolonged GTC without confirmed epilepsy (35%). The choice of medication was guided by patient/caregiver perspective (88%), cost/insurance coverage (80%), and epilepsy type (67%), with less emphasis on route (35%); FDA guidelines influenced only 35% of prescribers.