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Correction to: How satisfied are cervical dystonia patients after 3 years of botulinum toxin type A treatment? Results from a prospective, long-term observational study

Authors :
VALERIA TUGNOLI
Mihaela Simu
Chi Wang Ip
Roland Dominic G. Jamora
Carlo Colosimo
Dag Nyholm
Robert Jech
Tibor Kovács
Janika Kõrv
Giacomo Lus
Peter Hedera
Source :
Journal of Neurology
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Background Patients with cervical dystonia (CD) typically require regular injections of botulinum toxin to maintain symptomatic control. We aimed to document long-term patient satisfaction with CD symptom control in a large cohort of patients treated in routine practice. Methods This was a prospective, international, observational study (NCT01753349) following the course of adult CD treated with botulinum neurotoxin type A (BoNT-A) over 3 years. A comprehensive clinical assessment status was performed at each injection visit and subjects reported satisfaction in two ways: satisfaction with symptom control at peak effect and at the end of treatment cycle. Results Subject satisfaction remained relatively stable from the first to the last injection visit. At 3 years, 89.9% of subjects reported satisfaction with symptom control at peak effect and 55.6% reported satisfaction with symptom control at end of treatment cycle. By contrast, objective ratings of CD severity showed an overall reduction over 3 years. Mean ± SD Toronto Western Spasmodic Rating Scale (TWSTRS) Total scores (clinician assessed at end of treatment cycle) decreased from 31.59 ± 13.04 at baseline to 24.49 ± 12.43 at 3 years (mean ± SD reduction from baseline of − 6.97 ± 11.56 points). Tsui scale scores also showed gradual improvement; the percent of subjects with a tremor component score of 4 reduced from 12.4% at baseline to 8.1% at 3 years. Conclusions Despite objective clinical improvements over 3 years, subject satisfaction with symptom control remained relatively constant, indicating that factors other than symptom control also play a role in patient satisfaction. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (10.1007/s00415-019-09527-2) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Details

ISSN :
14321459
Volume :
266
Issue :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of neurology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....cbedf37b70952708339aefc643dda0f7