Examining the Role of Sublingual Atropine for the Treatment of Sialorrhea in Patients with Neurodevelopmental Disabilities: A Retrospective Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
References
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Total n = 178 n (%) | |
---|---|
Age in years at initiation of atropine | |
Average (range) | 7.8 (2 months–22 years) |
<1 year | 21 (11.8%) |
1–<3 years | 26 (14.6%) |
3–<12 years | 80 (44.9%) |
>12 years | 51 (28.7%) |
Gender | |
Male | 96 (54%) |
Female | 82 (46%) |
Underlying Diagnosis | |
Cerebral Palsy | 98 (55.1%) |
Genetic/syndromic disorder | 35 (19.7%) |
Neuromuscular disease | 17 (9.6%) |
Neurodegenerative condition | 11 (6.2%) |
Brain injury | 5 (2.8%) |
Developmental disorder | 4 (2.2%) |
Multiple congenital anomalies | 4 (2.2%) |
Unknown/other | 4 (2.2%) |
Initial n = 178 n (%) | Final n = 178 n (%) | |
---|---|---|
Drops per dose | ||
Atropine 0.5% | ||
1 drop | 9 (5%) | 0 (0%) |
2 drop | 6 (3.4%) | 1 (0.56%) |
Atropine 1% | ||
1 drop | 125 (70.2%) | 126 (70.8%) |
2 drop | 36 (20.2%) | 47 (26.4%) |
3 drop | 2 (1.12%) | 3 (1.7%) |
4 drop | 0 (0%) | 1 (0.56%) |
Frequency of dosing | ||
QDay | 44 (24.7%) | 37 (20.8%) |
BID | 63 (35.4%) | 60 (33.7%) |
TID | 38 (21.3%) | 42 (23.6%) |
4 times daily | 19 (10.7%) | 25 (14%) |
6 times daily | 14 (7.9%) | 14 (7.9%) |
Total drops per day | ||
Atropine 0.5% | ||
1 drop | 2 (1.1%) | 0 (0%) |
2 drop | 3 (1.337%) | 0 (0%) |
3 drop | 1 (0.56%) | 0 (0%) |
4 drop | 1 (0.56%) | 1 (0.56%) |
6 drop | 5 (2.8%) | 0 (0%) |
12 drop | 3 (1.7%) | 0 (0%) |
Atropine 1% | ||
1 drop | 36 (20.2%) | 31 (17.4%) |
2 drop | 51 (28.7%) | 48 (27%) |
3 drop | 24 (13.5%) | 28 (15.7%) |
4 drop | 25 (14%) | 31 (17.4%) |
6 drop | 17 (9.6%) | 21 (11.8%) |
8 drop | 7 (3.9%) | 10 (5.6%) |
9 drop | 1 (0.56%) | 1 (0.56%) |
12 drop | 2 (1.1%) | 7 (3.9%) |
Rx written as PRN | 66 (37%) | 79 (44.4%) |
Study | Our Study | Dias et al. [30] | Norderyd et al. [31] | Azapagasi et al. [36] |
---|---|---|---|---|
Population | ≤22 years with NDD (n = 178) | 2-17 years with CP (n = 25) | 5–18 years with disabilities (final study group n = 11) | PICU patients 3–78 months (n = 20, of whom 19/20 had a NDD) |
Product | atropine 0.5% ophthalmic drop; atropine 1% ophthalmic drop; atropine 0.5% oral solution | atropine 0.5% ophthalmic drop | atropine 1% ophthalmic drop | atropine sulfate ampoule |
Directions | Varied/retrospective observation, initial dosing | Give 1 drop SL TID at 6h intervals for patients 10–19 kg Give 2 drops SL TID at 6h intervals for patients ≥20 kg | After 3 weeks of no treatment, Give 1 drop QDay for 4 weeks followed by 1 drop BID for 4 weeks | 0.02 mg/kg/dose 4-6 times daily for 7 days Minimum dose was 0.25 mg, Maximum dose was 0.03 mg/kg (per author) |
Drops/dose | 1–3 drops | 10–19 kg: 1 drop ≥20 kg: 2 drop | 1 drop | N/A |
Frequency | QDay-6 times daily | TID | QDay-BID | 4–6 times daily |
mg/day | 0.25–6 mg/day Average: 1.5 mg/day | 10–19 kg: 0.75 mg/day * ≥20 kg: 1.5 mg/day * | 0.5–1 mg/day † | 1 mg/day ‡-range unknown |
mg/kg/day | 0.01–0.49 mg/kg/day Average: 0.091 mg/kg/day | 10–19 kg: 0.04–0.075 mg/kg/day * ≥20 kg: ≤0.075 mg/kg/day * | NA | 0.08–0.18 mg/kg/day § |
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Petkus, K.D.; Noritz, G.; Glader, L. Examining the Role of Sublingual Atropine for the Treatment of Sialorrhea in Patients with Neurodevelopmental Disabilities: A Retrospective Review. J. Clin. Med. 2023, 12, 5238. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12165238
Petkus KD, Noritz G, Glader L. Examining the Role of Sublingual Atropine for the Treatment of Sialorrhea in Patients with Neurodevelopmental Disabilities: A Retrospective Review. Journal of Clinical Medicine. 2023; 12(16):5238. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12165238
Chicago/Turabian StylePetkus, Kayla Durkin, Garey Noritz, and Laurie Glader. 2023. "Examining the Role of Sublingual Atropine for the Treatment of Sialorrhea in Patients with Neurodevelopmental Disabilities: A Retrospective Review" Journal of Clinical Medicine 12, no. 16: 5238. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12165238
APA StylePetkus, K. D., Noritz, G., & Glader, L. (2023). Examining the Role of Sublingual Atropine for the Treatment of Sialorrhea in Patients with Neurodevelopmental Disabilities: A Retrospective Review. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 12(16), 5238. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12165238