Recent research demonstrates positive outcomes in children implanted under 12 months of age. Developing research on earlier implantation could lead to a change in the current FDA criteria allowing infants to reach their speech and hearing potential faster.
Objectives
To characterize the duration of Eustachian tube dysfunction in children with cleft palate compared to those without cleft palate by performing time‐to‐event analysis on tympanometric data.
To determine predictive characteristics of earlier achievement of normal tympanograms in children with cleft palate.
Methods
Longitudinal tympanometric data from a minimum of 10 years at a single center were reviewed for children with cleft palate born in the years 2003 through 2007. Children with cleft lip without cleft palate born in the same years were used as a reference group to compare children with similar length of follow‐up. The association between time to sustained normal (type A) tympanograms with patient demographics, clinical characteristics, and otologic history was evaluated using time‐to‐event analysis and compared with log rank tests. Adjusted and unadjusted hazard ratios were estimated using Cox proportional hazard models.
Results
The median age of achieving a type A tympanogram in children with cleft palate was 9.9 years for one and 12.1 years for both ears, compared to 7.1 and 7.4 years in children with cleft lip only (P < 0.0001). On multivariate analysis, clinical characteristics such as the severity of palatal clefting or the presence of a cleft‐associated syndrome/sequence were not predictors of a longer time to a type A tympanogram.
Conclusion
Our results help characterize the observation that there is delayed time to normal Eustachian tube function in children with cleft palate, which is not associated with the degree of palatal clefting.
Level of Evidence
3b Laryngoscope, 130:1044–1050, 2020
Objective
To evaluate the characteristics of children with cleft palate associated with persistent otologic issues in the first 10 years of life.
Study Design
Case series with chart review.
Setting
Single academic center.
Subjects and Methods
Children born with cleft palate from 2003 to 2007 and treated by the UC Davis Cleft and Craniofacial Team between January 2003 and December 2017 were included in the study. Data from 143 patients were analyzed via Wilcoxon rank sum and Fisher exact tests for univariate analysis and logistic regression to determine adjusted odds ratios.
Results
The median length of follow-up was 9.9 years, and the age at last ear examination was 10.7 years. At the last evaluation, unresolved otologic issues were common, with at least 1 ear having a tympanic membrane (TM) perforation (16.1%), a tympanostomy tube (36.2%), or conductive hearing loss (23.1%). After adjusting for demographic and clinical characteristics, history of palate revision or speech surgery was associated with having a TM perforation (P = .02). The only clinical variables associated with conductive hearing loss was the presence of a TM perforation (P < .01) or a genetic abnormality (P = .02). Severity of palatal clefting was not associated with specific otologic or audiologic outcomes after adjusting for other characteristics.
Conclusion
A large proportion of children with cleft palate have persistent otologic issues at age 10 years and would benefit from continued close monitoring well after the age when most children have normalized eustachian tube function. Prolonged otologic issues were not found to be associated with cleft type.
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