Tympanostomy Tubes or Medical Management for Recurrent Acute Otitis Media

Alejandro Hoberman, Diego Preciado, Jack L Paradise, David H Chi, MaryAnn Haralam, Stan L Block, Diana H Kearney, Sonika Bhatnagar, Gysella B Muñiz Pujalt, Timothy R Shope, Judith M Martin, Daniel E Felten, Marcia Kurs-Lasky, Hui Liu, Kristin Yahner, Jong-Hyeon Jeong, Norman L Cohen, Brian Czervionke, Jennifer P Nagg, Joseph E Dohar, Nader Shaikh, Alejandro Hoberman, Diego Preciado, Jack L Paradise, David H Chi, MaryAnn Haralam, Stan L Block, Diana H Kearney, Sonika Bhatnagar, Gysella B Muñiz Pujalt, Timothy R Shope, Judith M Martin, Daniel E Felten, Marcia Kurs-Lasky, Hui Liu, Kristin Yahner, Jong-Hyeon Jeong, Norman L Cohen, Brian Czervionke, Jennifer P Nagg, Joseph E Dohar, Nader Shaikh

Abstract

Background: Official recommendations differ regarding tympanostomy-tube placement for children with recurrent acute otitis media.

Methods: We randomly assigned children 6 to 35 months of age who had had at least three episodes of acute otitis media within 6 months, or at least four episodes within 12 months with at least one episode within the preceding 6 months, to either undergo tympanostomy-tube placement or receive medical management involving episodic antimicrobial treatment. The primary outcome was the mean number of episodes of acute otitis media per child-year (rate) during a 2-year period.

Results: In our main, intention-to-treat analysis, the rate (±SE) of episodes of acute otitis media per child-year during a 2-year period was 1.48±0.08 in the tympanostomy-tube group and 1.56±0.08 in the medical-management group (P = 0.66). Because 10% of the children in the tympanostomy-tube group did not undergo tympanostomy-tube placement and 16% of the children in the medical-management group underwent tympanostomy-tube placement at parental request, we conducted a per-protocol analysis, which gave corresponding episode rates of 1.47±0.08 and 1.72±0.11, respectively. Among secondary outcomes in the main analysis, results were mixed. Favoring tympanostomy-tube placement were the time to a first episode of acute otitis media, various episode-related clinical findings, and the percentage of children meeting specified criteria for treatment failure. Favoring medical management was children's cumulative number of days with otorrhea. Outcomes that did not show substantial differences included the frequency distribution of episodes of acute otitis media, the percentage of episodes considered to be severe, and antimicrobial resistance among respiratory isolates. Trial-related adverse events were limited to those included among the secondary outcomes of the trial.

Conclusions: Among children 6 to 35 months of age with recurrent acute otitis media, the rate of episodes of acute otitis media during a 2-year period was not significantly lower with tympanostomy-tube placement than with medical management. (Funded by the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders and others; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT02567825.).

Copyright © 2021 Massachusetts Medical Society.

Figures

Figure 1.. Enrollment, Randomization, and Follow-up of…
Figure 1.. Enrollment, Randomization, and Follow-up of Children in the Trial.
TTP denotes tympanostomy-tube placement.
Figure 2.. Time to First Recurrent Episode…
Figure 2.. Time to First Recurrent Episode of Acute Otitis Media.
Shown are one minus Kaplan–Meier survival estimates of the cumulative percentage of children who had a recurrent episode of acute otitis media, according to trial group. The median time to a first occurrence of acute otitis media was longer in the tympanostomy-tube group than in the medical-management group (4.34 months vs. 2.33 months; hazard ratio, 0.68; 95% confidence interval, 0.52 to 0.90).

Source: PubMed

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