4.7 Article

The Impact of the Course of Disease before Botulinum Toxin Therapy on the Course of Treatment and Long-Term Outcome in Cervical Dystonia

Journal

TOXINS
Volume 13, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/toxins13070493

Keywords

cervical dystonia; natural history; course of disease; CoDB-graph; botulinum toxin therapy; long-term outcome; patient's drawing

Funding

  1. Inge Diesbach-Stiftung

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This study investigated the impact of the disease course of idiopathic cervical dystonia (CD) on the long-term outcomes of botulinum toxin therapy before treatment initiation. It found that younger age at onset of symptoms was associated with shorter time to therapy, and there were correlations between disease course and treatment effectiveness.
This study analyses the influence of the course of the disease of idiopathic cervical dystonia (CD) before botulinum toxin (BoNT) therapy on long-term outcomes. 74 CD-patients who were treated on a regular basis in the botulinum toxin outpatient department of the University of Dusseldorf and had received at least 3 injections were consecutively recruited after written informed consent. Patients were asked to rate the amount of change of CD in relation to the severity of CD at begin of BoNT therapy (IMPQ). Then they had to draw the course of disease of CD from onset of symptoms until initiation of BoNT therapy (CoDB-graph) on a sheet of paper into a square of 10 x 10 cm(2) size. Remaining severity of CD was estimated by the treating physician using the TSUI-score. Demographical and treatment related data were extracted from the charts of the patients. Depending on the curvature four different types of CoDB-graphs could be distinguished. Time to BoNT therapy, increase of dose and improvement during BoNT treatment were significantly (p < 0.05) different when patients were split up according to CoDB-graph types. The lower the age at onset of symptoms, the shorter was the time to therapy (p < 0.02). Initial dose (p < 0.04) and actual dose (p < 0.009) were negatively correlated with the age of the patients at recruitment. The course of disease of CD before BoNT therapy has influence on long-term outcome. This has implications on patient management and information on the efficacy of BoNT treatment.

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