February 2008
Most tympanostomies for ear infections unnecessary
A new study suggests
that children who typically receive an operation to insert ear tubes because
of ear infections or fluid in the ear may not need it, according to
clinical practice guidelines.
The research, conducted
by Salomeh Keyhani, MD, MPH, Assistant Professor in the Department of Health
Policy at Mount Sinai School of Medicine and her multidisciplinary team of
colleagues, found that most children who had ear tube operations in the New
York City area in 2002 had mild disease for which experts recommend either
medical treatment or watchful waiting ‑‑ not ear tube implantation.
This study is published
in the January 2008 issue of Pediatrics, the official journal of the
American Academy of Pediatrics. These findings suggest overuse of ear tubes
and update a similar finding made about this practice in the United States
in 1990‑1991.
Tympanostomy tubes, or
ear tubes, are small implants that ventilate the middle ear space to the ear
canal through the tympanic membrane. Ear tubes are often inserted to treat
recurrent episodes of acute otitis media (inflammation of the middle ear),
or the persistence of otitis media with effusion (fluid in the middle ear
space, but without the symptoms of an acute infection). Tympanostomy tube
insertion is the most common procedure that requires general anesthesia for
children in the United States, with half a million or more surgeries done
each year.
"Ear infection is the
most common illness with which children present to the doctor," said Dr.
Keyhani, lead researcher of the study. "We found that many children are
getting surgeries for minor disease and the typical child who gets ear tube
surgery does not have disease severe enough to warrant the operation. If the
study findings could be applied to rest of the country, it would be
particularly troubling."
For the study, Dr.
Keyhani and her colleagues at Mount Sinai examined the clinical data for 682
children who received tympanostomy tubes from any of five New York
Metropolitan area hospitals in 2002. This data was collected from the
pediatrician, otolaryngologist, and hospital chart for each child for the
year prior to surgery.
Clinical practice
guidelines endorsed by the American Academies of Pediatrics, Family
Physicians, and Otolaryngology ‑‑ Head and Neck Surgery recommend that, in
general, children with fluid in their ear should not receive ear tubes
unless that fluid has been persistent for at least 3 to 4 months
consecutively. Dr. Keyhani said, "One of our key findings is that more than
three quarters of the children in our study who got ear tubes had fluid for
less than a month and a half."
SOURCE:
Mount Sinai Medical Center, Jan. 4, 2008