Tonsillectomy for recurrent sore throats in children: indications, outcomes, and efficacy.

Autores
Categoría Revisión sistemática
RevistaOtolaryngology--head and neck surgery : official journal of American Academy of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery
Año 2014
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OBJECTIVE:

To perform a comprehensive narrative review of the literature to provide a better understanding of the indications, outcomes, and efficacy of tonsillectomy for recurrent sore throats in children. This article explores the reasons why there is a lack of robust clinical evidence for its efficacy despite good evidence of positive reported outcomes from parents of children who undergo the procedure.

DATA SOURCES:

Articles published between 1960 and July 2013 were searched in PubMed and Cochrane databases.

REVIEW METHODS:

A narrative review method was adopted to provide a comprehensive overview of articles. Only individual, interventional studies on children (0-16 years old) undergoing tonsillectomy or adenotonsillectomy for recurrent sore throats with greater than 1 month of follow-up were included.

CONCLUSIONS:

The inclusion criteria and outcome measures in the studies were varied, but most investigated changes in symptoms related to sore throats or illness episodes. Quality-of-life tools validated for measuring pediatric outcomes were used in a number of more recent studies. None of the outcome measures were specific for recurrent sore throats in children. No qualitative method designed studies were identified.

IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE:

The disparity between parental satisfaction rates and published clinical efficacy can be explained by a lack of parent/child outcome measures specific to tonsillectomy for recurrent sore throats. A more parent/child-centered approach may establish what tonsillectomy could offer this group of children.
Epistemonikos ID: 3329069232e60027df5e15b68b5231e280c5607b
First added on: Feb 27, 2014