| Literature DB >> 28274235 |
Christian F Poets1,2, Christoph Maas3,4, Wolfgang Buchenau3,4, Joerg Arand3, Anne Vierzig5, Bert Braumann6, Silvia Müller-Hagedorn3,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Treatment of Robin sequence is often either invasive or of unproven effectiveness. The pre-epiglottic baton plate (PEBP) is a well-studied alternative, yet is not widely applied internationally. We report on a prospective 3-center cohort study investigating this treatment. Based on an agreed protocol, parents of infants with Robin sequence referred to participating centers were offered enrollment, which involved taking a maxillary cast followed by endoscopy to fit the plate and sleep studies to monitor its effectiveness. Recordings were centrally analyzed by sleep specialists blinded to timing and center. Primary outcome was the mixed-obstructive apnea index, defined as the number of such apneas/h of sleep; secondary outcomes included the desaturation index to <80% pulse oximeter saturation and weight gain.Entities:
Keywords: Failure to thrive; Pierre-Robin sequence; Upper airway obstruction
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28274235 PMCID: PMC5343539 DOI: 10.1186/s13023-017-0602-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Fig. 1Patient Flow through this study. RS-Infants, infants with (Pierre-) Robin sequence; PEBP, pre-epiglottic baton plate. # In 7 infants with mild degree of upper airway obstruction a palatal plate without a spur was used, in 2 infants a CPAP-device or naso-pharyngeal tube was applied, 1 infant had early tracheostomy. * 1 study center (Würzburg) did not succeed in setting up and performing sleep studies, therefore the 4 patients referred to this center could not be included in the study
Clinical data
| Age at admission, mean (SD; interquartile range) (wk) | 5.0 (5.4; 0.0–15.9) |
| Age at discharge, mean (SD; interquartile range) (wk) | 8.0 (5.6; 1.1–6.1) |
| Age at follow-up, mean (SD; range) (wk) | 18.6 (6.8; 7.0–36.1) |
| SDS for weight upon admission, mean (SD), | −0.84 (1.10) |
| SDS for weight at discharge, mean (SD), | −0.74 (0.87) |
| SDS for weight at follow-up, mean (SD), | −0.87 (0.96) |
| SDS for head circumference, upon admission; mean (SD), | −0.76 (1.27) |
| SDS for head circumference, at discharge; mean (SD), | −0.70 (1.17) |
| SDS for head circumference, at follow-up; mean (SD), | −0.57 (1.12) |
| Feeding tube upon admission, | 36 (74%) |
| Feeding tube at discharge, | 15 (31%) |
| Feeding tube at follow-up, | 7 (14%) |
| Type of obstruction | 40 |
| - Sher 2, | 4 |
| - Sher 3, | 3 |
| - Not classified, | 2 |
Sleep study results
| Variable | Admissiona | Dischargeb | Follow-upc |
|---|---|---|---|
| MOAI, median (IQR) | 15.9 (6.3–31.5) | 2.3 (1.2–5.4) | 0.7 (0.1–2.4) |
| DI80, median (IQR) | 0.38 (0.0–2.68) | 0.0 (0.0–0.13) | 0.0 (0.0–0.08) |
a No data for 3 infants; b no data for 5 infants, p < 0,001 c no data for 17 infants
Fig. 2Boxplots showing results for the Mixed-Obstructive Apnea Index as the primary outcome of this study, studied upon admission, prior to hospital discharge, and at a 3-month follow-up visit