Speech Outcomes Following Operative Management of Velopharyngeal Dysfunction (VPD) in Non-Syndromic Post-Palatoplasty Cleft Palate Patients.
Autor: | Kimia, Rotem, Solot, Cynthia B., McCormack, Susan M., Cohen, Marilyn, Blum, Jessica D., Villavisanis, Dillan F., Vora, Nisha, Valenzuela, Zachary, Taylor, Jesse A., Low, David W., Jackson, Oksana A. |
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Předmět: |
SPEECH evaluation
PHARYNX surgery PALATE surgery T-test (Statistics) QUESTIONNAIRES TERTIARY care RETROSPECTIVE studies AGE distribution DESCRIPTIVE statistics SEVERITY of illness index SURGICAL complications PEDIATRICS LONGITUDINAL method SURGICAL flaps ODDS ratio OPERATIVE surgery REOPERATION CONFIDENCE intervals VELOPHARYNGEAL insufficiency CLEFT palate |
Zdroj: | Cleft Palate Craniofacial Journal; Jun2024, Vol. 61 Issue 6, p1007-1017, 11p |
Abstrakt: | Objective: Approximately 30% of patients with a history of repaired cleft palate (CP) go on to suffer from velopharyngeal dysfunction (VPD). This study discusses the operative management of VPD and postoperative speech outcomes in a cohort of CP patients. Setting: An academic tertiary pediatric care center. Methods: Retrospective cohort study. Patients: Patients with history of repaired CP (Veau I-IV) who underwent operative management of VPD between January 1st, 2010 and December 31st, 2020. Operative modalities were posterior pharyngeal flap (PPF), sphincter pharyngoplasty (SPP), Furlow palate re-repair, and buccal myomucosal flap palate lengthening (PL). Outcome measures: The primary outcome measure is postoperative speech improvement evaluated by the Pittsburgh Weighted Speech Scale (PWSS). Results: 97 patients met inclusion criteria. 38 patients with previous straight-line primary palatoplasty underwent Furlow re-repair; these patients were significantly younger (7.62 vs 11.14, P <.001) and were more likely to have severe VPD per PWSS (OR 4.28, P <.01, 95% CI 1.46-12.56) when compared to VPD patients with previous Furlow repair. 21.1% of these patients required an additional non-revisional VPD procedure. The remaining patients underwent a non-revision procedure (26 PPF, 22 SPP, 11 PL); all experienced significant (P <.001 on paired t-test) reductions in PWSS total and subgroup VPD severity scores without difference in improvement between operation types. SPP was statistically associated with all-cause complication (OR 2.79, 95% CI 1.03-7.59, P <.05) and hyponasality (OR 3.27, 95% CI 1.112-9.630, P <.05). Conclusion: Furlow re-repair reduced need for additional VPD operations. Speech outcomes between non-revisional operations are comparable, but increased complications were seen in SPP. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
Databáze: | Complementary Index |
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