From the Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery and the USC Institute of Global Health, Keck School of Medicine of the University of Southern California; the Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Shriners Hospital for Children; the Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Children's Hospital Los Angeles; the Division of Plastic Surgery, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York-Presbyterian Hospital; and Operation Smile International.
Plast Reconstr Surg. 2019 Apr;143(4):790e-797e. doi: 10.1097/PRS.0000000000005432.
There is no universally accepted classification system for unilateral cleft lip that objectively quantifies the spectrum of disease, making it difficult to evaluate postoperative outcomes in the context of preoperative severity.
Anthropometric measurements and photographs were prospectively collected from unilateral cleft lip patients in Morocco, Bolivia, Vietnam, and Madagascar. Columellar angle, cleft width, nostril widths, vertical lip heights, and horizontal vermillion lengths were measured preoperatively and postoperatively. "Unacceptable" postoperative outcomes were defined as those with a cleft-side/non-cleft-side vertical lip height discrepancy greater than 3 mm, based on previous sociologic and cleft outcome studies.
Of the 147 patients studied, 22 had unacceptable outcomes. Univariate logistic and multivariate logistic stepwise models showed that among preoperative characteristics, cleft width ratio (preoperative cleft width divided by commissure width) was the most significant predictor for unacceptable outcomes, controlling for surgeon experience. Cleft width ratio was normally distributed. Two severity categories were created based on iterative data and regression analysis: "severe" (cleft width ratio >0.5) and "not-severe" (cleft width ratio <0.5). Severe patients had a higher likelihood of unacceptable outcomes versus not-severe patients (OR, 2.9; 95 percent CI, 1.1 to 7.7; p = 0.029; 27 percent versus 11 percent). The probability of having unacceptable outcomes for severe individuals was higher versus not-severe individuals (positive predictive value, 73 percent versus 89 percent).
Preoperative cleft width ratio greater than 0.5 is associated with having an unacceptable surgical outcome. The authors propose a simple, objective, and clinically reproducible scale to unify the language of unilateral cleft lip severity, as a step toward improving algorithms of care, directing surgical technique, guiding patient/family discussions, and optimizing patient outcomes.
CLINICAL QUESTION/LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Risk, III.
目前尚不存在一种普遍接受的单侧唇裂分类系统,该系统能够客观地量化疾病谱,从而难以在术前严重程度的背景下评估术后结果。
前瞻性地从摩洛哥、玻利维亚、越南和马达加斯加的单侧唇裂患者中收集人体测量和照片。术前和术后测量鼻中隔角、裂隙宽度、鼻孔宽度、唇垂直高度和唇红水平长度。根据先前的社会学和唇裂结果研究,将术后“不可接受”的结果定义为裂隙侧/非裂隙侧唇垂直高度差异大于 3mm。
在 147 名研究患者中,有 22 名患者的结果不可接受。单变量逻辑和多变量逻辑逐步模型显示,在术前特征中,裂隙宽度比(术前裂隙宽度除以口角宽度)是不可接受结果的最显著预测因子,控制了外科医生经验。裂隙宽度比呈正态分布。根据迭代数据和回归分析,创建了两个严重程度类别:“严重”(裂隙宽度比>0.5)和“不严重”(裂隙宽度比<0.5)。与不严重患者相比,严重患者不可接受结果的可能性更高(比值比,2.9;95%置信区间,1.1 至 7.7;p=0.029;27%比 11%)。严重患者发生不可接受结果的概率高于不严重患者(阳性预测值,73%比 89%)。
术前裂隙宽度比大于 0.5 与手术结果不可接受相关。作者提出了一种简单、客观且临床上可重复的分级方法,旨在统一单侧唇裂严重程度的语言,以改善护理算法、指导手术技术、指导医患/家庭讨论并优化患者结局。
临床问题/证据水平:风险,III。