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舌系带过紧并伴有母乳喂养困难的婴儿行 Frenotomy 联合母乳喂养支持与单纯母乳喂养支持的效果比较:FROSTTIE RCT

Frenotomy with breastfeeding support versus breastfeeding support alone for infants with tongue-tie and breastfeeding difficulties: the FROSTTIE RCT.

机构信息

National Perinatal Epidemiology Unit, Nuffield Department of Population Health, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.

PPI representative, The Breastfeeding Network, Paisley, UK.

出版信息

Health Technol Assess. 2023 Jul;27(11):1-73. doi: 10.3310/WBBW2302.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Tongue-tie can be diagnosed in 3-11% of babies, with some studies reporting almost universal breastfeeding difficulties, and others reporting very few feeding difficulties that relate to the tongue-tie itself, instead noting that incorrect positioning and attachment are the primary reasons behind the observed breastfeeding difficulties and not the tongue-tie itself. The only existing trials of frenotomy are small and underpowered and/or include only very short-term or subjective outcomes.

OBJECTIVE

To investigate whether frenotomy is clinically and cost-effective to promote continuation of breastfeeding at 3 months in infants with breastfeeding difficulties diagnosed with tongue-tie.

DESIGN

A multicentre, unblinded, randomised, parallel group controlled trial.

SETTING

Twelve infant feeding services in the UK.

PARTICIPANTS

Infants aged up to 10 weeks referred to an infant feeding service (by a parent, midwife or other breastfeeding support service) with breastfeeding difficulties and judged to have tongue-tie.

INTERVENTIONS

Infants were randomly allocated to frenotomy with standard breastfeeding support or standard breastfeeding support without frenotomy.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES

Primary outcome was any breastmilk feeding at 3 months according to maternal self-report. Secondary outcomes included mother's pain, exclusive breastmilk feeding, exclusive direct breastfeeding, frenotomy, adverse events, maternal anxiety and depression, maternal and infant NHS health-care resource use, cost-effectiveness, and any breastmilk feeding at 6 months of age.

RESULTS

Between March 2019 and November 2020, 169 infants were randomised, 80 to the frenotomy with breastfeeding support arm and 89 to the breastfeeding support arm from a planned sample size of 870 infants. The trial was stopped in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic due to withdrawal of breastfeeding support services, slow recruitment and crossover between arms. In the frenotomy with breastfeeding support arm 74/80 infants (93%) received their allocated intervention, compared to 23/89 (26%) in the breastfeeding support arm. Primary outcome data were available for 163/169 infants (96%). There was no evidence of a difference between the arms in the rate of breastmilk feeding at 3 months, which was high in both groups (67/76, 88% vs. 75/87, 86%; adjusted risk ratio 1.02, 95% confidence interval 0.90 to 1.16). Adverse events were reported for three infants after surgery [bleeding ( = 1), salivary duct damage ( = 1), accidental cut to the tongue and salivary duct damage ( = 1)]. Cost-effectiveness could not be determined with the information available.

LIMITATIONS

The statistical power of the analysis was extremely limited due to not achieving the target sample size and the high proportion of infants in the breastfeeding support arm who underwent frenotomy.

CONCLUSIONS

This trial does not provide sufficient information to assess whether frenotomy in addition to breastfeeding support improves breastfeeding rates in infants diagnosed with tongue-tie.

FUTURE WORK

There is a clear lack of equipoise in the UK concerning the use of frenotomy, however, the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of the procedure still need to be established. Other study designs will need to be considered to address this objective.

TRIAL REGISTRATION

This trial is registered as ISRCTN 10268851.

FUNDING

This project was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Health Technology Assessment Programme (project number 16/143/01) and will be published in full in ; Vol. 27, No. 11. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information. The funder had no role in study design or data collection, analysis and interpretation. The views expressed are those of the authors and not necessarily those of the NHS, the NIHR or the Department of Health and Social Care.

摘要

背景

舌系带过短在 3-11%的婴儿中可被诊断出来,一些研究报告称母乳喂养困难普遍存在,而另一些研究报告称母乳喂养困难与舌系带本身相关的非常少,反而指出不正确的定位和附着是观察到的母乳喂养困难的主要原因,而不是舌系带本身。现有的关于切开术的唯一试验规模较小且效力不足,或者仅包括短期或主观结果。

目的

调查在母乳喂养困难的婴儿中,切开术是否在临床上和成本效益上有助于在 3 个月时继续母乳喂养。

设计

一项多中心、非盲、随机、平行组对照试验。

地点

英国的 12 个婴儿喂养服务机构。

参与者

由父母、助产士或其他母乳喂养支持服务机构转介至婴儿喂养服务机构(由父母、助产士或其他母乳喂养支持服务机构)的母乳喂养困难且被诊断为舌系带过短的婴儿。

干预措施

婴儿随机分配至接受切开术联合标准母乳喂养支持或仅接受标准母乳喂养支持。

主要结局测量

主要结局是根据母亲的自我报告,3 个月时任何母乳喂养。次要结局包括母亲的疼痛、纯母乳喂养、纯直接母乳喂养、切开术、不良事件、母亲的焦虑和抑郁、母亲和婴儿的国民保健服务医疗资源使用、成本效益,以及 6 个月时任何母乳喂养。

结果

在 2019 年 3 月至 2020 年 11 月期间,共有 169 名婴儿被随机分配,80 名婴儿接受切开术联合母乳喂养支持治疗,89 名婴儿接受母乳喂养支持治疗,计划样本量为 870 名婴儿。由于母乳喂养支持服务的退出、招募缓慢以及两组之间的交叉,该试验在 COVID-19 大流行的背景下停止。在接受切开术联合母乳喂养支持治疗的 80 名婴儿中,有 74 名(93%)接受了他们的分配干预,而在接受母乳喂养支持治疗的 89 名婴儿中,仅有 23 名(26%)接受了该干预。163/169 名(96%)婴儿的主要结局数据可用。两组的母乳喂养率均很高,在 3 个月时没有证据表明两组之间的母乳喂养率存在差异,分别为 75/87(86%)和 67/76(88%);调整后的风险比为 1.02(95%置信区间为 0.90 至 1.16)。手术后有 3 名婴儿报告了不良事件[出血( = 1)、唾液腺损伤( = 1)、意外切断舌头和唾液腺损伤( = 1)]。无法根据现有信息确定成本效益。

局限性

由于未达到目标样本量以及母乳喂养支持组中接受切开术的婴儿比例较高,分析的统计功效受到极大限制。

结论

这项试验没有提供足够的信息来评估在被诊断为舌系带过短的婴儿中,切开术联合母乳喂养支持是否能提高母乳喂养率。

未来工作

英国在使用切开术方面明显缺乏平衡,但该手术的有效性和成本效益仍需确定。需要考虑其他研究设计来解决这一目标。

试验注册

本试验在 ISRCTN 注册,注册号为 16/143/01。

资金

该项目由英国国家卫生与保健优化研究所(NIHR)卫生技术评估计划(项目编号 16/143/01)资助,全文将在 ; 第 27 卷,第 11 期。欲了解更多项目信息,请访问 NIHR 期刊库网站。资助者在研究设计或数据收集、分析和解释方面没有任何作用。所表达的观点是作者的观点,不一定是英国国民保健制度、NIHR 或英国卫生部和社会保健部的观点。

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