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Changes in severity and impact of drooling after submandibular gland botulinum neurotoxin A injections in children with neurodevelopmental disabilities

Authors :
Peter H. Jongerius
Alexander C. H. Geurts
Jan J W van der Burg
Karen van Hulst
Corrie E. Erasmus
Source :
Developmental Medicine and Child Neurology, Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology, 62, 3, pp. 354-362, Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology, 62, 354-362
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
John Wiley and Sons Inc., 2019.

Abstract

Aims To examine changes in objective and subjective drooling severity measures after submandibular botulinum neurotoxin A injection in children with neurodevelopmental disabilities, explore their relationship, and evaluate if clinically relevant responses relate to changes in the impact of drooling. Method This longitudinal, observational cohort study involved 160 children (92 males, 68 females; 3–17y, mean 9y 1mo, SD 3y 6mo) treated between 2000 and 2012 at the Radboud University Medical Center, Nijmegen, the Netherlands. Repeated measures analysis of variance was used to compare the 5‐minute Drooling Quotient (DQ5) and Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) for drooling severity pretreatment and posttreatment, and Pearson’s rho to assess their association. A parent questionnaire was used to assess drooling impact in responders (defined as ≥50% reduction in DQ5 and/or ≥2 SD reduction in VAS for drooling severity 8wks postintervention) and non‐responders. Results One hundred and twelve children (70%) were responders. Their mean VAS for drooling severity and DQ5 scores were significantly lower 32 weeks postintervention compared to baseline. At baseline, the VAS for drooling severity‐DQ5 relationship was ‘weak’ (rs=0.15, p=0.060), whereas it was ‘fair’ at 8 weeks (rs=0.43, p=0.000) and 32 weeks (rs=0.30, p=0.000). For responders, a significant change was found regarding the impact of drooling on daily care and social interactions at 8 weeks after intervention; most of these effects were maintained at 32 weeks. Interpretation A clinically relevant response based on a combination of objective and subjective measures of drooling severity was accompanied by positive changes regarding the impact of drooling on daily care and social interactions. What this paper adds Botulinum neurotoxin A injection into the submandibular glands reduced drooling severity in 70% of children with neurodevelopmental disabilities.Objective (5‐minute Drooling Quotient) and subjective (Visual Analogue Scale for drooling severity) measures correlated 8 and 32 weeks after treatment.Objective and subjective measures complemented each other when changes in drooling severity were assessed.Reduced drooling severity was accompanied by positive changes with regard to the impact of drooling.<br />What this paper adds Botulinum neurotoxin A injection into the submandibular glands reduced drooling severity in 70% of children with neurodevelopmental disabilities.Objective (5‐minute Drooling Quotient) and subjective (Visual Analogue Scale for drooling severity) measures correlated 8 and 32 weeks after treatment.Objective and subjective measures complemented each other when changes in drooling severity were assessed.Reduced drooling severity was accompanied by positive changes with regard to the impact of drooling. This article's abstract has been translated into Spanish and Portuguese. Follow the links from the http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/dmcn.14391/abstract to view the translations.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14698749 and 00121622
Volume :
62
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Developmental Medicine and Child Neurology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4a16f652ab73094ef06b976258dbb669