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Effect and Cost-utility of of High Intensity vs. Low Intensity Speech Intervention in Children With Cleft Palate

U

University Ghent

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Cleft Palate Children
Speech Therapy
Cleft Lip and Palate
Speech Disorders in Children

Treatments

Behavioral: Low intensive combined phonetic-phonological intervention
Behavioral: High intensive combined phonetic-phonological intervention

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06381713
ONZ-2024-0158

Details and patient eligibility

About

Achieving speech that is understandable and acceptable to others is the key outcome in cleft treatment. Therefore, speech therapy provided by a speech-language pathologist is necessary. This intervention is traditionally provided twice per week for 30 minutes for months or even years by first-line speech-language pathologists. Unfortunately, this low intensity intervention is based on a historical context rather than scientific evidence. This means that current speech therapy knows several shortcomings including poor outcomes, treatment fatigue and high costs related to year-long therapy. Because of these issues, the use of high intensity speech intervention is proposed. Even though solid proof-of-concepts exist for this model, it has not yet found its way into clinical practice.

Before this intensity can be implemented and utilized in clinical practice, the effect of this novel program on a larger societal scale must be determined. This project will compare the effect of high intensity and low intensity speech intervention in children with a cleft palate in terms of speech, quality of life, and cost-utility as provided by first-line speech-language pathologists by conducting a large-scale randomized controlled trial. The final goal is to utilize this program in clinical practice and to create awareness of the benefits for children with a cleft palate among stakeholders.

Full description

Objective 1: Conduct a large-scale randomized controlled trial to compare the short- and long-term sustainable effects of two different speech intervention intensities (i.e. high intensity speech intervention: 5x30 min/week during 2x4 weeks (2x10 hours) and low intensity speech intervention: 2x30 min/week during 20 weeks (20 hours)) on the speech and quality of life in Belgian Dutch-speaking children with a cleft palate with or without a cleft lip. Speech intervention will be provided by first-line speech language pathologists in private practices who will receive thorough training before the onset of the trial.

Hypothesis 1: Based on the state-of-the-art and our proof-of-concept, it is assumed that 20 hours of high intensity speech intervention will lead to superior speech outcomes and health-related quality of life compared to 20 hours of low intensity speech intervention.

Objective 2: To compare the cost-utility in quality-adjusted life years of two different speech intervention intensities (i.e. high intensity speech intervention: 5x30 min/week during 2x4 weeks (2x10 hours) and low intensity speech intervention: 2x30 min/week during 20 weeks (20 hours)) in Belgian Dutch-speaking children with a cleft palate with or without a cleft lip. Demonstrating the cost-effectiveness of high intensity speech intervention will facilitate implementation and utilization of this protocol in clinical practice as less money has to be spent in order to gain one life year in full health (QALY) when providing high intensity speech intervention compared to low intensity speech intervention.

Hypothesis 2: Besides the superior speech outcomes and health related quality of life in a shorter intervention time (cfr. hypothesis 1), it is hypothesized that less money has to be spent in order to gain one life year in full health (QALY) in the high intensity intervention group. In other words, it is hypothesized that high intensity intervention will be more cost-effective compared to low intensity speech intervention.

Enrollment

70 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

4 to 12 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Belgian Dutch-speaking children with a cleft palate with or without a cleft lip
  • Aged between 4 and 12 years,
  • Presence of at least one compensatory speech error in their speech based on the perceptual assessment of one experienced speech-language pathologist

Exclusion criteria

  • Children with syndromic clefts
  • Oronasal fistula
  • Velopharyngeal insufficiency
  • Hearing disabilities based on pure tone audiometry (>25 dB HL)
  • Cognitive and/or related learning disabilities or neuromuscular disorders

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

70 participants in 2 patient groups

High intensive speech therapy
Experimental group
Description:
To investigate the (cost-)effectiveness of speech therapy for children with a cleft palate (with of without a cleft lip), we will provide a high-intensive speech intervention.
Treatment:
Behavioral: High intensive combined phonetic-phonological intervention
Low intensive speech therapy
Active Comparator group
Description:
To investigate the (cost-)effectiveness of speech therapy for children with a cleft palate (with of without a cleft lip), we will provide a low-intensive speech intervention.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Low intensive combined phonetic-phonological intervention

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Fien Allemeersch

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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