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Background To prevent later developmental impairments, myringotomy with the insertion of tympanostomy tubes has often been undertaken in young children who have persistent otitis media with effusion. We previously reported that prompt as compared with delayed insertion of tympanostomy tubes in children with persistent effusion who were younger than three years of age did not result in improved developmental outcomes at three or four years of age. However, the effect on the outcomes of school-age children is unknown.
Methods We enrolled 6350 healthy infants younger than 62 days of age and evaluated them regularly for middle-ear effusion. Before three years of age, 429 children with persistent middle-ear effusion were randomly assigned to have tympanostomy tubes inserted either promptly or up to nine months later if effusion persisted. We assessed developmental outcomes in 395 of these children at six years of age.
Results At six years of age, 85 percent of children in the early-treatment group and 41 percent in the delayed-treatment group had received tympanostomy tubes. There were no significant differences in mean (±SD) scores favoring early versus delayed treatment on any of 30 measures, including the Wechsler Full-Scale Intelligence Quotient (98±13 vs. 98±14); Number of Different Words test, a measure of word diversity (183±36 vs. 175±36); Percentage of Consonants CorrectRevised test, a measure of speech-sound production (96±2 vs. 96±3); the SCAN test, a measure of central auditory processing (95±15 vs. 96±14); and several measures of behavior and emotion.
Conclusions In otherwise healthy children younger than three years of age who have persistent middle-ear effusion within the duration of effusion that we studied, prompt insertion of tympanostomy tubes does not improve developmental outcomes at six years of age.
Source Information
From the Departments of Pediatrics (J.L.P., H.M.F.) and Family Medicine and Clinical Epidemiology (J.E.J.), School of Medicine; the Department of Communication Science and Disorders (T.F.C., C.A.D., H.M.F., D.L.S.); and the Department of Biostatistics, Graduate School of Public Health (H.E.R., M.K.-L.) all at the University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh; and the Departments of Pediatrics (J.L.P., H.M.F., B.S.B., D.K.C.) and Audiology and Communication Disorders (T.F.C., D.L.P., D.L.S., C.G.S.), Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh.
Address reprint requests to Dr. Paradise at Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh, 3705 Fifth Ave., Pittsburgh, PA 15213-2583, or at jpar{at}pitt.edu.
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