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Pharyngeal electrical stimulation for neurogenic dysphagia following stroke, traumatic brain injury or other causes: Main results from the PHADER cohort study
BACKGROUND: Neurogenic dysphagia is common and has no definitive treatment. We assessed whether pharyngeal electrical stimulation (PES) is associated with reduced dysphagia. METHODS: The PHAryngeal electrical stimulation for treatment of neurogenic Dysphagia European Registry (PHADER) was a prospect...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
Elsevier
2020
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7700977/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33294818 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eclinm.2020.100608 |
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author | Bath, Philip M. Woodhouse, Lisa J. Suntrup-Krueger, Sonja Likar, Rudolf Koestenberger, Markus Warusevitane, Anushka Herzog, Juergen Schuttler, Michael Ragab, Suzanne Everton, Lisa Ledl, Christian Walther, Ernst Saltuari, Leopold Pucks-Faes, Elke Bocksrucker, Christof Vosko, Milan de Broux, Johanna Haase, Claus G. Raginis-Zborowska, Alicja Mistry, Satish Hamdy, Shaheen Dziewas, Rainer |
author_facet | Bath, Philip M. Woodhouse, Lisa J. Suntrup-Krueger, Sonja Likar, Rudolf Koestenberger, Markus Warusevitane, Anushka Herzog, Juergen Schuttler, Michael Ragab, Suzanne Everton, Lisa Ledl, Christian Walther, Ernst Saltuari, Leopold Pucks-Faes, Elke Bocksrucker, Christof Vosko, Milan de Broux, Johanna Haase, Claus G. Raginis-Zborowska, Alicja Mistry, Satish Hamdy, Shaheen Dziewas, Rainer |
author_sort | Bath, Philip M. |
collection | PubMed |
description | BACKGROUND: Neurogenic dysphagia is common and has no definitive treatment. We assessed whether pharyngeal electrical stimulation (PES) is associated with reduced dysphagia. METHODS: The PHAryngeal electrical stimulation for treatment of neurogenic Dysphagia European Registry (PHADER) was a prospective single-arm observational cohort study. Participants were recruited with neurogenic dysphagia (comprising five groups – stroke not needing ventilation; stroke needing ventilation; ventilation acquired; traumatic brain injury; other neurological causes). PES was administered once daily for three days. The primary outcome was the validated dysphagia severity rating scale (DSRS, score best-worst 0–12) at 3 months. FINDINGS: Of 255 enrolled patients from 14 centres in Austria, Germany and UK, 10 failed screening. At baseline, mean (standard deviation) or median [interquartile range]: age 68 (14) years, male 71%, DSRS 11·4 (1·7), time from onset to treatment 32 [44] days; age, time and DSRS differed between diagnostic groups. Insertion of PES catheters was successfully inserted in 239/245 (98%) participants, and was typically easy taking 11·8 min. 9 participants withdrew before the end of treatment. DSRS improved significantly in all dysphagia groups, difference in means (95% confidence intervals, CI) from 0 to 3 months: stroke (n = 79) –6·7 (–7·8, –5·5), ventilated stroke (n = 98) –6·5 (–7·6, –5·5); ventilation acquired (n = 35) –6·6 (–8·4, –4·8); traumatic brain injury (n = 24) -4·5 (–6·6, –2·4). The results for DSRS were mirrored for instrumentally assessed penetration aspiration scale scores. DSRS improved in both supratentorial and infratentorial stroke, with no difference between them (p = 0·32). In previously ventilated participants with tracheotomy, DSRS improved more in participants who could be decannulated (n = 66) –7·5 (–8·6, –6·5) versus not decannulated (n = 33) –2·1 (–3·2, –1·0) (p<0·001). 74 serious adverse events (SAE) occurred in 60 participants with pneumonia (9·2%) the most frequent SAE. INTERPRETATION: In patients with neurogenic dysphagia, PES was safe and associated with reduced measures of dysphagia and penetration/aspiration. FUNDING: Phagenesis Ltd. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-7700977 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2020 |
publisher | Elsevier |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-77009772020-12-07 Pharyngeal electrical stimulation for neurogenic dysphagia following stroke, traumatic brain injury or other causes: Main results from the PHADER cohort study Bath, Philip M. Woodhouse, Lisa J. Suntrup-Krueger, Sonja Likar, Rudolf Koestenberger, Markus Warusevitane, Anushka Herzog, Juergen Schuttler, Michael Ragab, Suzanne Everton, Lisa Ledl, Christian Walther, Ernst Saltuari, Leopold Pucks-Faes, Elke Bocksrucker, Christof Vosko, Milan de Broux, Johanna Haase, Claus G. Raginis-Zborowska, Alicja Mistry, Satish Hamdy, Shaheen Dziewas, Rainer EClinicalMedicine Research Paper BACKGROUND: Neurogenic dysphagia is common and has no definitive treatment. We assessed whether pharyngeal electrical stimulation (PES) is associated with reduced dysphagia. METHODS: The PHAryngeal electrical stimulation for treatment of neurogenic Dysphagia European Registry (PHADER) was a prospective single-arm observational cohort study. Participants were recruited with neurogenic dysphagia (comprising five groups – stroke not needing ventilation; stroke needing ventilation; ventilation acquired; traumatic brain injury; other neurological causes). PES was administered once daily for three days. The primary outcome was the validated dysphagia severity rating scale (DSRS, score best-worst 0–12) at 3 months. FINDINGS: Of 255 enrolled patients from 14 centres in Austria, Germany and UK, 10 failed screening. At baseline, mean (standard deviation) or median [interquartile range]: age 68 (14) years, male 71%, DSRS 11·4 (1·7), time from onset to treatment 32 [44] days; age, time and DSRS differed between diagnostic groups. Insertion of PES catheters was successfully inserted in 239/245 (98%) participants, and was typically easy taking 11·8 min. 9 participants withdrew before the end of treatment. DSRS improved significantly in all dysphagia groups, difference in means (95% confidence intervals, CI) from 0 to 3 months: stroke (n = 79) –6·7 (–7·8, –5·5), ventilated stroke (n = 98) –6·5 (–7·6, –5·5); ventilation acquired (n = 35) –6·6 (–8·4, –4·8); traumatic brain injury (n = 24) -4·5 (–6·6, –2·4). The results for DSRS were mirrored for instrumentally assessed penetration aspiration scale scores. DSRS improved in both supratentorial and infratentorial stroke, with no difference between them (p = 0·32). In previously ventilated participants with tracheotomy, DSRS improved more in participants who could be decannulated (n = 66) –7·5 (–8·6, –6·5) versus not decannulated (n = 33) –2·1 (–3·2, –1·0) (p<0·001). 74 serious adverse events (SAE) occurred in 60 participants with pneumonia (9·2%) the most frequent SAE. INTERPRETATION: In patients with neurogenic dysphagia, PES was safe and associated with reduced measures of dysphagia and penetration/aspiration. FUNDING: Phagenesis Ltd. Elsevier 2020-11-10 /pmc/articles/PMC7700977/ /pubmed/33294818 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eclinm.2020.100608 Text en © 2020 The Author(s) http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). |
spellingShingle | Research Paper Bath, Philip M. Woodhouse, Lisa J. Suntrup-Krueger, Sonja Likar, Rudolf Koestenberger, Markus Warusevitane, Anushka Herzog, Juergen Schuttler, Michael Ragab, Suzanne Everton, Lisa Ledl, Christian Walther, Ernst Saltuari, Leopold Pucks-Faes, Elke Bocksrucker, Christof Vosko, Milan de Broux, Johanna Haase, Claus G. Raginis-Zborowska, Alicja Mistry, Satish Hamdy, Shaheen Dziewas, Rainer Pharyngeal electrical stimulation for neurogenic dysphagia following stroke, traumatic brain injury or other causes: Main results from the PHADER cohort study |
title | Pharyngeal electrical stimulation for neurogenic dysphagia following stroke, traumatic brain injury or other causes: Main results from the PHADER cohort study |
title_full | Pharyngeal electrical stimulation for neurogenic dysphagia following stroke, traumatic brain injury or other causes: Main results from the PHADER cohort study |
title_fullStr | Pharyngeal electrical stimulation for neurogenic dysphagia following stroke, traumatic brain injury or other causes: Main results from the PHADER cohort study |
title_full_unstemmed | Pharyngeal electrical stimulation for neurogenic dysphagia following stroke, traumatic brain injury or other causes: Main results from the PHADER cohort study |
title_short | Pharyngeal electrical stimulation for neurogenic dysphagia following stroke, traumatic brain injury or other causes: Main results from the PHADER cohort study |
title_sort | pharyngeal electrical stimulation for neurogenic dysphagia following stroke, traumatic brain injury or other causes: main results from the phader cohort study |
topic | Research Paper |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7700977/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33294818 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eclinm.2020.100608 |
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