Affiliation:
1. Departments of Pediatrics,
2. Health Policy, and Vanderbilt Evidence-based Practice Center, Institute for Medicine and Public Health, and
3. Otolaryngology, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee
Abstract
CONTEXT:
The effectiveness of tonsillectomy or adenotonsillectomy (“tonsillectomy”) for recurrent throat infection compared with watchful waiting is uncertain.
OBJECTIVE:
To compare sleep, cognitive, behavioral, and health outcomes of tonsillectomy versus watchful waiting in children with recurrent throat infections.
DATA SOURCES:
MEDLINE, Embase, and the Cochrane Library.
STUDY SELECTION:
Two investigators independently screened studies against predetermined criteria.
DATA EXTRACTION:
One investigator extracted data with review by a second. Investigators independently assessed risk of bias and strength of evidence (SOE) and confidence in the estimate of effects.
RESULTS:
Seven studies including children with ≥3 infections in the previous 1 to 3 years addressed this question. In studies reporting baseline data, number of infections/sore throats decreased from baseline in both groups, with greater decreases in sore throat days, clinician contacts, diagnosed group A streptococcal infections, and school absences in tonsillectomized children in the short term (<12 months). Quality of life was not markedly different between groups at any time point.
LIMITATIONS:
Few studies fully categorized infection/sore throat severity; attrition was high.
CONCLUSIONS:
Throat infections, utilization, and school absences improved in the first postsurgical year in tonsillectomized children versus children not receiving surgery. Benefits did not persist over time; longer-term outcomes are limited. SOE is moderate for reduction in short-term throat infections and insufficient for longer-term reduction. SOE is low for no difference in longer-term streptococcal infection reduction. SOE is low for utilization and missed school reduction in the short term, low for no difference in longer-term missed school, and low for no differences in quality of life.
Publisher
American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)
Subject
Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
Cited by
29 articles.
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