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Bell's palsy - the effect of prednisolone and/or valaciclovir versus placebo in relation to baseline severity in a randomised controlled trial.

Author

  • Sara Axelsson
  • Berg Thomas
  • Jonsson Lars
  • Engström Mats
  • Kanerva Mervi
  • Anna Stjernquist-Desatnik

Summary, in English

Objectives:

To evaluate the treatment effect of prednisolone and/or valaciclovir in Bell's palsy patients with different baseline severity of palsy.



Design:

Patient data were collected from the Scandinavian Bell's Palsy Study, a prospective, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multi-centre trial. Setting: Sixteen otorhinolaryngological centres in Sweden and one in Finland.



Participants:

Altogether 829 patients aged 18-75 years were treated within 72 hours of palsy onset. Patients were randomly assigned to treatment with prednisolone plus placebo (n=210), valaciclovir plus placebo (n=207), prednisolone plus valaciclovir (n=206), placebo plus placebo (n=206). Follow-up was 12 months.



Main outcome measures:

Facial function was assessed using the Sunnybrook grading scale at baseline and at 12 months. Complete recovery was defined as Sunnybrook score = 100.



Results: All patients, regardless of baseline severity, showed significantly higher complete recovery rates if treated with prednisolone compared with no prednisolone. In patients with severe palsy, recovery at 12 months was 51% with prednisolone treatment versus 31% without prednisolone (P=0.02). Corresponding results were 68% versus 51% (P=0.004) for moderate, and 83% versus 73% (P=0.02) for mild palsy. In patient groups with moderate and mild palsy at baseline, significantly fewer prednisolone-treated patients had synkinesis at 12 months (P=0.04 and P<0.0001, respectively). For patients with severe palsy at baseline, prednisolone versus no prednisolone made no significant difference regarding synkinesis at 12 months. Valaciclovir did not add any significant effect to prednisolone regarding recovery rate or synkinesis at 12 months.



Conclusion:

Prednisolone treatment resulted in higher complete recovery rates, regardless of severity at baseline. Prednisolone treatment should be considered in all patients irrespective of degree of palsy. © 2012 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

Publishing year

2012

Language

English

Pages

283-290

Publication/Series

Clinical Otolaryngology

Volume

37

Issue

4

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell

Topic

  • Otorhinolaryngology

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1749-4486