Roberts Joanne E, Rosenfeld Richard M, Zeisel Susan A
Frank Porter Graham Child Development Institute, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599-8180, USA.
Pediatrics. 2004 Mar;113(3 Pt 1):e238-48. doi: 10.1542/peds.113.3.e238.
Considerable controversy surrounds whether a history of otitis media with effusion (OME) in early childhood causes later speech and language problems. We conducted a meta-analysis of prospective studies to determine: 1) whether a history of OME in early childhood is related to receptive language, expressive language, vocabulary, syntax, or speech development in children 1 to 5 years old and 2) whether hearing loss caused by otitis media in early childhood is related to children's receptive language or expressive language through 2 years of age.
We searched online databases and bibliographies of OME studies and reviews for prospective or randomized clinical trials published between January 1966 and October 2002 that examined the relationship of OME or OME-associated hearing loss in early childhood to children's later speech and language development. The original search identified 38 studies, of which 14 had data suitable for calculating a pooled correlation coefficient (correlational studies) or standard difference between parallel groups (group studies). Random-effects meta-analysis was used to pool data when at least 3 studies had usable data for a particular outcome.
We performed 11 meta-analyses. There were no significant findings for the analyses of OME during early childhood versus receptive or expressive language during the preschool years in the correlation studies. Similarly, there were no significant findings for OME versus vocabulary, syntax, or speech during the preschool years. Conversely, there was a significant negative association between OME and preschoolers' receptive and expressive language (lower language) (0.24 and 0.25 standard difference, respectively) in the group studies. Additionally, hearing was also related to receptive and expressive language in infancy (3%-9% of variance).
Our results indicate no to very small negative associations of OME and associated hearing loss to children's later speech and language development. These findings may overestimate the impact of OME on outcomes, because most studies did not adjust for known confounding variables (such as socioeconomic status) and excluded data not suitable for statistical pooling, especially from methodologically sound studies. Although some OME language differences were detectable by meta-analysis due to increased statistical power, the clinical relevance for otherwise healthy children is uncertain.
关于儿童早期中耳积液(OME)病史是否会导致后期言语和语言问题存在相当大的争议。我们对前瞻性研究进行了一项荟萃分析,以确定:1)儿童早期OME病史是否与1至5岁儿童的接受性语言、表达性语言、词汇、句法或言语发展有关;2)儿童早期中耳炎引起的听力损失是否与2岁前儿童的接受性语言或表达性语言有关。
我们在OME研究和综述的在线数据库及参考文献中搜索了1966年1月至2002年10月期间发表的前瞻性或随机临床试验,这些试验研究了儿童早期OME或与OME相关的听力损失与儿童后期言语和语言发展之间的关系。最初的搜索确定了38项研究,其中14项有适合计算合并相关系数(相关性研究)或平行组间标准差(组间研究)的数据。当至少3项研究有特定结局的可用数据时,采用随机效应荟萃分析来汇总数据。
我们进行了11项荟萃分析。在相关性研究中,对儿童早期OME与学龄前接受性或表达性语言的分析没有显著发现。同样,对学龄前OME与词汇、句法或言语的分析也没有显著发现。相反,在组间研究中,OME与学龄前儿童的接受性和表达性语言(较低语言水平)之间存在显著的负相关(标准差分别为0.24和0.25)。此外,听力也与婴儿期的接受性和表达性语言有关(方差的3%-9%)。
我们的结果表明,OME及相关听力损失与儿童后期言语和语言发展之间不存在或存在非常小的负相关。这些发现可能高估了OME对结局的影响,因为大多数研究没有对已知的混杂变量(如社会经济地位)进行调整,并且排除了不适合统计汇总的数据,特别是来自方法学上可靠研究的数据。尽管由于统计功效的提高,荟萃分析能够检测到一些OME语言差异,但对于其他方面健康的儿童,其临床相关性尚不确定。