Trials / Unknown
UnknownNCT03995199
A Comparison of Speech Outcome in Pediatric Cleft Patients, After Modified Furlow-Sommerlad Palatoplasty in Comparison to Modified Furlow Palatoplasty Alone
A Comparison of Speech Outcome in Pediatric Cleft Patients, After Modified Furlow Palatoplasty in Combination With Intravelar Veloplasty According to Sommerlad, or Modified Furlow Palatoplasty Alone
- Status
- Unknown
- Phase
- —
- Study type
- Observational
- Enrollment
- 60 (estimated)
- Sponsor
- AZ Sint-Jan AV · Academic / Other
- Sex
- All
- Age
- 5 Years – 7 Years
- Healthy volunteers
- —
Summary
Nowadays, surgical success of cleft palate patients is ascribed to the sufficiency of velopharyngeal closure, and the associated speech results such as voice nasality, resonance and articulation. The investigators aim to evaluate if the surgical modified Furlow palatoplasty in combination with the intravelar veloplasty according to Sommerlad significantly reduces the number of pediatric patients with abnormal speech between five and seven years of age, as measured with the four-point scale recently published by Nguyen et al.(2015), in comparison to the conventional modified Furlow technique. study design A prospective cohort trial. All cleft palate patients surgically treated with a modified Furlow technique since January 2012 or a modified Furlow technique in combination with an intravelar veloplasty by Sommerlad routinely undergo an annual speech evaluation by the speech language pathologist of the cleft team. At the age of five, eligible patients that are in continuous follow-up by the cleft team at our hospital, will be asked for consent to register their demographic, surgical and speech-related data. In addition, the parents of cleft patients will be asked to complete a quality of life questionnaire concerning their child, at the time of speech evaluation through self-report or through an interview with the clinical research coordinator. The investigators hypothesise that the combined modified Furlow and Sommerlad palatoplasty leads to a minimal 50% reduction in the proportion of children with abnormal speech, as defined by the four-point scale recently published by Nguyen et al.(2015), compared to patients that underwent a Modified Furlow technique alone. conclusion Although the technique by Sommerlad has shown promising results, prospective trials comparing postoperative speech outcome after different surgical techniques, are lacking. The present trial could offer objective results to validate the current surgical treatment protocol implemented at our department.
Detailed description
Nowadays, surgical success of cleft palate patients is ascribed to the sufficiency of velopharyngeal closure, and the associated speech results such as voice nasality, resonance and articulation. The investigators aim to evaluate if the surgical modified Furlow palatoplasty in combination with the intravelar veloplasty according to Sommerlad significantly reduces the number of pediatric patients with abnormal speech between five and seven years of age, as measured with the four-point scale recently published by Nguyen et al.(2015), in comparison to the conventional modified Furlow technique. study design A prospective cohort trial. All cleft palate patients surgically treated with a modified Furlow technique since January 2012 or a modified Furlow technique in combination with an intravelar veloplasty by Sommerlad routinely undergo an annual speech evaluation by the speech language pathologist of the cleft team. At the age of five, eligible patients that are in continuous follow-up by the cleft team at our hospital, will be asked for consent to register their demographic, surgical and speech-related data. In addition, the parents of cleft patients will be asked to complete a quality of life questionnaire concerning their child, at the time of speech evaluation through self-report or through an interview with the clinical research coordinator. The investigators hypothesise that the combined modified Furlow and Sommerlad palatoplasty leads to a minimal 50% reduction in the proportion of children with abnormal speech, as defined by the four-point scale recently published by Nguyen et al.(2015), compared to patients that underwent a Modified Furlow technique alone. conclusion Although the technique by Sommerlad has shown promising results, prospective trials comparing postoperative speech outcome after different surgical techniques, are lacking. The present trial could offer objective results to validate the current surgical treatment protocol implemented at our department.
Conditions
Timeline
- Start date
- 2017-09-13
- Primary completion
- 2025-01-01
- Completion
- 2025-12-31
- First posted
- 2019-06-21
- Last updated
- 2022-03-11
Locations
1 site across 1 country: Belgium
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03995199. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.