Overview

Welcome to the STOP’EM website

Surgeons Trial Of Prophylaxis for Epilepsy in seizure naive patients with Meningioma: a randomised controlled trial

Randomised patients

Target patients

1004

Open sites

10

Target Sites

20

 
 

STOP’EM is a multi-site, randomised controlled study. The study will aim to find out whether a 2-week course of levetiracetam, starting shortly before surgery, reduces the risk of developing seizures within 12 months of surgery, compared to 2 weeks of placebo.

The trial is funded by the National Institute for Health Research's Health Technology Assessment Programme (NIHR HTA) and is sponsored by University of Liverpool. The day-to-day running of the trial, monitoring and analysis is being coordinated by a team at the Liverpool Clinical Trials Centre (LCTC).

Study Summary

Why are we doing the STOP'EM study?

STOP’EM is a study for adults with a meningioma that needs surgical removal and who have not had a seizure before. We want to know if a short course of an anti-seizure medication (ASM) started 1 day before surgery prevents seizures happening after surgery.

Meningioma are the commonest primary brain tumour. They grow from the lining of the brain. In the UK each year about 1600 people with a meningioma have surgery. Approximately 70% of people do not present with epileptic seizures, but after within 12 months of surgical removal, around 1 in 8 people (12%) will have an epileptic seizure for the first time. Seizures affect quality of life & lead to uncertainty about the future.

In patients who have never had a seizure, neurosurgeons do not know whether giving an ASM before surgery (prophylaxis) will prevent seizures. Some neurosurgeons use prophylaxis & others do not.

STOP’EM will compare a well-established ASM called levetiracetam, to a placebo (a capsule that looks the same but contains no active drug). STOP’EM will look at whether starting levetiracetam shortly before surgery as a preventative measure:

    1. reduces the chance of having a seizure in the 12 months after surgery
    2. allows more people to resume driving 12 months after surgery
    3. affects the quality of life in patients
    4. is cost-effective

Participants will be assigned at random to either:

    Group 1: levetiracetam for 14 days
    Group 2: placebo for 14 days

Participants will follow the normal care pathway and will be followed up regularly for 12 months to assess if they develop seizures, and to measure their quality of life.

Info for Patients

Want more information about the STOP'EM trial? Watch the videos below:

Introduction for patients

Frequently Asked Questions

Participant Information Sheets

Info for Sites/Clinicians

Patient Inclusion Criteria

Patients with the following characteristics will be eligible for inclusion in the trial:

  • 1. Newly-diagnosed meningioma on MRI
  • 2. Seizure-naïve at presentations
  • 3. Surgical resection of meningioma planned
  • 4. Age ≥16 years
  • 5. Written and informed consent

Patient Exclusion Criteria

Patients with the following characteristics will be excluded from the trial:

  • 1. Posterior fossa meningioma
  • 2. Previous history of epilepsy
  • 3. Previous history of provoked seizures
  • 4. Previous cranial neurosurgery for any cause
  • 5. Renal failure (Chronic Kidney Disease [CKD] 3-5)
  • 6. Use of anti-epileptic drug for another indication (e.g. trigeminal neuralgia) within 7 days preceding randomisation
  • 7. Known hypersensitivity to levetiracetam, other pyrrolidone derivatives or any of the excipients
  • 8. Actively breastfeeding
  • 9. Weigh below 50kg (if aged 16 or 17 years)

Frequently Asked Questions for Sites

STOP'EM Site Initiation Training for Clinicians and Research Nurses v2.0 14/08/23 (36 minutes)

STOP’EM Site Initiation Training for Pharmacy v1.0 03/07/23 Pharmacy (19 minutes)

STOP’EM Site Initiation Training for Research Nurses and Administrators v2.0 14/08/23 (13 minutes)

Collaborators

Study funder

National Institute for Health Research's Health Technology Assessment Programme (NIHR HTA) (NIHR129748)

Study organiser

Liverpool Clinical Trials Centre (LCTC), part of University of Liverpool

Study review and approval

The study has been reviewed by the London Central Research Ethics Committee, who have agreed that the study is being conducted in a correct and appropriate manner. The study has also been approved by the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA).

Recruiting Sites

Sites Open to Recruitment

  1. The Walton Centre NHS Foundation Trust (The Walton Centre NHS Trust) opened to recruitment 01/07/24.
  2. King’s College Hospital (King’s College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust) opened to recruitment 29/07/24.
  3. Addenbrooke's Hospital (Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust) opened to recruitment 23/08/2024.
  4. University Hospital of Wales (Cardiff and Vale University Health Board) opened to recruitment 30/08/2024.
  5. Queen's Medical Centre (Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust) opened to recruitment 11/09/2024.
  6. Royal Stoke University Hospital (University Hospitals of North Midlands NHS Trust) opened to recruitment 12/09/2024.
  7. National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery (University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust) opened to recruitment 27/09/2024.
  8. Hull Royal Infirmary (Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust) opened to recruitment 11/10/2024.
  9. Southampton General Hospital (University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust) opened to recruitment 08/11/2024.
  10. Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh (NHS Lothian) opened to recruitment 09/12/2024.

Contact

Please feel free to contact the STOP'EM team by any of the means below:

Email: stopem@liverpool.ac.uk

Telephone: 0151 795 1732

Address:
Liverpool Clinical Trials Centre,
University of Liverpool,
2nd Floor Institute in the Park
Alder Hey Children's NHS Foundation Trust
Eaton Road
Liverpool
L12 2AP