Dear Sir,I read the article by Furness et al.
(2022) with great interest. The authors have managed to highlight the increased
difficulty of orthodontic treatment of patients born with a cleft and have also highlighted
several limitations of such a retrospective study.For instance, it is difficult to tell from the paper whether any records were missing, what
level of training any of the operators had or the distribution of cases from each unit. Were
any of the cases treated by a trainee or non-cleft specialist orthodontists?The outcomes are presented combining all cleft types. This approach, while providing an
overall figure for the region or unit, does tend to cloud the actual outcome for cases of
unilateral (UCLP) and bilateral cleft lip and palate (BCLP). These two groups present with
their own different dental anomalies and growth patterns, which are very different from other
cleft types. They therefore should be looked at separately. In addition, one has to take care
interpreting outcomes as the small numbers in such a study can add to inaccuracies.Of greater importance, this paper highlights the differing outcome figures from different
centres, when compared to those reported by Deacon et al. (2007) and Stonehouse-Smith et al. (2022). For cases of UCLP, the
Peer Assessment Rating (PAR) improvements are in the range of 56%–84%, and for cases of BCLP
53%–80%. These figures suggest that further investigation is required to explain the large
differences in these outcomes, whether they be due to surgical protocols, surgeon skills or
orthodontist skills.I would like to suggest that when comparing unit or centre outcomes that Nomogram and PAR
outcomes are presented as bar charts with the traffic light approach, similar to the way
GOSLON outcomes are presented.The mean pre-and post-treatment PAR Scores (Figure 1) illustrate the figures from different centres or units. The pre-treatment
PAR scores above 40 confirm the increased difficulty of cases of UCLP and BCLP.
Figure 1.
Mean pre- and post-treatment PAR scores.
Mean pre- and post-treatment PAR scores.Figure 2 illustrates the percentage
changes from different units and the National Cleft Standard.
Figure 2.
Nomogram % as a bar chart.
Nomogram % as a bar chart.The figures from Royal Manchester Children’s Hospital, considering the results of a
high-volume operator, suggest that perhaps the time has come to re-visit the Cleft
Standard.The Cleft Collective is in a perfect position to consider a serious prospective investigation
of Orthodontic Outcomes and to establish more up-to-date recommendations for orthodontic care
in the Cleft Service. I would encourage them to embark on such a study as their five-year-old
cohort are approaching the age of 12 years and are likely to shortly be embarking on
orthodontic treatment.