Benfer Katherine A, Weir Kelly A, Bell Kristie L, Ware Robert S, Davies Peter S W, Boyd Roslyn N
Queensland Cerebral Palsy and Rehabilitation Research Centre and
Menzies Health Institute of Queensland, Griffith University, Queensland, Australia; and.
Pediatrics. 2017 Dec;140(6). doi: 10.1542/peds.2017-0731.
To determine the progression of oropharyngeal dysphagia (OPD) in preschool-aged children with cerebral palsy (CP) according to gross motor function. It was hypothesized that fewer children would have OPD at 60 months compared with 18 to 24 months (predominately Gross Motor Function Classification System [GMFCS] I-II).
Longitudinal population-based cohort of 179 children (confirmed CP diagnosis, born in Queensland in 2006-2009, aged 18-60 months at study entry [mean = 34.1 months ± 11.9; 111 boys; GMFCS I = 46.6%, II = 12.9%, III = 15.7%, IV = 10.1%, and V = 14.6%]). Children had a maximum of 3 assessments (median = 3, total = 423 assessments). OPD was classified by using the Dysphagia Disorders Survey part 2 and rated from video by a certified pediatric speech pathologist. GMFCS was used to classify children's gross motor function.
OPD prevalence reduced from 79.7% at 18 to 24 months to 43.5% at 60 months. There were decreasing odds of OPD with increasing age (odds ratio [OR] = 0.92 [95% confidence interval (CI) 0.90 to 0.95]; < .001) and increasing odds with poorer gross motor function (OR = 6.2 [95% CI 3.6 to 10.6]; < .001). This reduction was significant for children with ambulatory CP (GMFCS I-II, OR = 0.93 [95% CI 0.90 to 0.96]; < .001) but not significant for children from GMFCS III to V (OR [III] = 1.0 [95% CI 0.9 to 1.1]; = .897; OR [IV-V] = 1.0 [95% CI 1.0 to 1.1]; = .366).
Half of the OPD present in children with CP between 18 and 24 months resolved by 60 months, with improvement most common in GMFCS I to II. To more accurately detect and target intervention at children with persisting OPD at 60 months, we suggest using a more conservative cut point of 6 out of 22 on the Dysphagia Disorders Survey for assessments between 18 and 48 months.
根据粗大运动功能确定脑瘫(CP)学龄前儿童口咽吞咽困难(OPD)的进展情况。研究假设,与18至24个月(主要为粗大运动功能分类系统[GMFCS] I-II级)相比,60个月时患有OPD的儿童数量会减少。
基于人群的纵向队列研究,纳入179名儿童(确诊为CP,2006 - 2009年出生于昆士兰州,研究开始时年龄为18 - 60个月[平均 = 34.1个月±11.9;111名男孩;GMFCS I = 46.6%,II = 12.9%,III = 15.7%,IV = 10.1%,V = 14.6%])。儿童最多接受3次评估(中位数 = 3,共423次评估)。使用吞咽障碍调查第2部分对OPD进行分类,并由认证的儿科言语病理学家根据视频进行评分。GMFCS用于对儿童的粗大运动功能进行分类。
OPD患病率从18至24个月时的79.7%降至6个月时的43.5%。随着年龄增长,OPD的发病几率降低(优势比[OR] = 0.92 [95%置信区间(CI) 0.90至0.95];P <.001),而粗大运动功能越差,发病几率越高(OR = 6.2 [95% CI 3.6至10.6];P <.001)。对于能行走的CP儿童(GMFCS I-II级),这种降低具有显著性(OR = 0.93 [95% CI 0.90至0.96];P <.001),但对于GMFCS III至V级的儿童则不显著([III级] OR = 1.0 [95% CI 0.9至1.1];P =.897;[IV - V级] OR = 1.0 [95% CI 1.0至1.1];P =.366)。
CP儿童在18至24个月时出现的OPD,到60个月时有一半得到缓解,GMFCS I至II级改善最为常见。为了在60个月时更准确地检测并针对持续存在OPD的儿童进行干预,我们建议在18至48个月的评估中,在吞咽障碍调查中使用更保守的切点,即22项中有6项异常。