Cervical dystonia: factors deteriorating patient satisfaction of long-term treatment with botulinum toxin.
Abstract
[OBJECTIVES] Botulinum toxin (BoNT) is an effective first-line treatment for cervical dystonia (CD). Despite generally good therapeutic efficacy, approximately 20-40% of CD patients do not achieve acceptable relief of the dystonic symptoms. The aim of this study was to identify factors of low patient satisfaction of long-term BoNT therapy for CD.
[METHODS] In this case-control study CD patients treated with BoNT intramuscular injections for up to 24 years were assessed by two independent assessors in three validated scales: TWSTRS, Tsui and VAS for pain measurement. Data on received BoNT doses and treatment duration were obtained from medical history. All of participants rated their long-term treatment satisfaction compared to the therapy onset on a 0-3 scale.
[RESULTS] Study was completed by 58 participants who were treated with BoNT for 9.0 ± 6.3 years and received a median of 19 injection cycles. None/low therapy satisfaction was reported by 20.7% of participants. Compared to moderate/good treatment satisfaction, CD patients with none/low BoNT efficacy had increased incidence of cervical pain (p =.018), enhanced mean VAS score for pain (p =.037) and had higher coexistence of oromandibular dystonia (p =.018). In addition, worse treatment satisfaction correlated with shorter time intervals between treatment cycles, enhanced scores of Tsui total, TWSTRS total, as well as TWSTRS subscales: severity, disability and pain.
[CONCLUSION] Cervical pain and coexistence of oromandibular dystonia deteriorated long-term treatment satisfaction in CD patients. Higher scores of Tsui and TWSTRS subscales were correlated with worse subjective BoNT treatment response.
[METHODS] In this case-control study CD patients treated with BoNT intramuscular injections for up to 24 years were assessed by two independent assessors in three validated scales: TWSTRS, Tsui and VAS for pain measurement. Data on received BoNT doses and treatment duration were obtained from medical history. All of participants rated their long-term treatment satisfaction compared to the therapy onset on a 0-3 scale.
[RESULTS] Study was completed by 58 participants who were treated with BoNT for 9.0 ± 6.3 years and received a median of 19 injection cycles. None/low therapy satisfaction was reported by 20.7% of participants. Compared to moderate/good treatment satisfaction, CD patients with none/low BoNT efficacy had increased incidence of cervical pain (p =.018), enhanced mean VAS score for pain (p =.037) and had higher coexistence of oromandibular dystonia (p =.018). In addition, worse treatment satisfaction correlated with shorter time intervals between treatment cycles, enhanced scores of Tsui total, TWSTRS total, as well as TWSTRS subscales: severity, disability and pain.
[CONCLUSION] Cervical pain and coexistence of oromandibular dystonia deteriorated long-term treatment satisfaction in CD patients. Higher scores of Tsui and TWSTRS subscales were correlated with worse subjective BoNT treatment response.
추출된 의학 개체 (NER)
| 유형 | 영어 표현 | 한국어 / 풀이 | UMLS CUI | 출처 | 등장 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 시술 | botulinum toxin
|
보툴리눔독소 주사 | dict | 2 |
MeSH Terms
Adult; Aged; Botulinum Toxins; Case-Control Studies; Female; Humans; Male; Middle Aged; Pain; Pain Measurement; Patient Satisfaction; Severity of Illness Index; Time; Torticollis; Treatment Outcome
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