Tedroff K, Hägglund G, Miller F. Long-term effects of
selective dorsal rhizotomy in children with cerebral palsy: a systematic
review. Dev Med Child Neurol. 2019 Jul 24. doi: 10.1111/dmcn.14320. [Epub ahead of
print]
Abstract
AIM:
To evaluate the long-term effects of selective dorsal
rhizotomy (SDR) 10 years or more after the procedure and complications observed
any time after SDR in children with cerebral palsy (CP).
METHOD:
Embase, PubMed, and the Cochrane Library were searched from
their individual dates of inception through 1st June 2018 for full-text
original articles in English that described long-term follow-up after SDR in
children with CP. The authors independently screened publications to determine
whether they met inclusion criteria; thereafter all authors extracted data on
patient characteristics, the proportion of the original cohort being
followed-up, and the reported outcomes.
RESULTS:
Of the 199 studies identified, 16 were included in this
evaluation: 14 were case series and two studies reported a retrospectively
assigned comparison group. Evidence concerning function was limited by study
design differences, clinical variability, loss to follow-up, and heterogeneity
across trials.
INTERPRETATION:
At 10 years or more follow-up, available studies generate
low-level evidence with considerable bias. No functional improvement of SDR
over routine therapy is documented. Furthermore, the long-term effects of SDR
with respect to spasticity reduction is unclear, with many studies reporting a
high amount of add-on spasticity treatment. More long-term follow-up using
robust scientific protocols is required before it can be decided whether the
use of SDR as routine therapy for children with CP is to be recommended or not.
WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS:
Ten years after selective dorsal rhizotomy, available
studies supply inconclusive evidence on functional outcomes. The long-term
effect on spasticity is uncertain, studies reported a substantial need for
add-on treatment. Short- and long-term complications seem frequent but are not
reported in a consistent manner.
Courtesy of: https://www.mdlinx.com/journal-summaries/cerebral-palsy-selective-dorsal-rhizotomy-children/2019/07/26/7573686?spec=neurology
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