Nonlinear Changes in Botulinum Toxin Treatment of Task-Specific Dystonia during Long-Term Treatment

Botulinum toxin (BoTX) is the standard treatment for task-specific dystonias (TSDs) such as musician’s dystonia (MD). Our aim was to assess the long-term changes in BoTX treatment in a highly homogeneous and, to our knowledge, largest group of MD patients with respect to the following parameters: (1...

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Main Authors: André Lee, Jabreel Al-Sarea, Eckart Altenmüller
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-05-01
Series:Toxins
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2072-6651/13/6/371
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spelling doaj-031774bfe97341b896e2173de8a9356e2021-06-01T00:48:04ZengMDPI AGToxins2072-66512021-05-011337137110.3390/toxins13060371Nonlinear Changes in Botulinum Toxin Treatment of Task-Specific Dystonia during Long-Term TreatmentAndré Lee0Jabreel Al-Sarea1Eckart Altenmüller2Institute of Music Physiology and Musicians’ Medicine, University of Music, Drama and Media Hannover, Neues Haus 1, 30175 Hanover, GermanyHanover Medical School, Carl-Neuberg-Str. 1, 30625 Hanover, GermanyInstitute of Music Physiology and Musicians’ Medicine, University of Music, Drama and Media Hannover, Neues Haus 1, 30175 Hanover, GermanyBotulinum toxin (BoTX) is the standard treatment for task-specific dystonias (TSDs) such as musician’s dystonia (MD). Our aim was to assess the long-term changes in BoTX treatment in a highly homogeneous and, to our knowledge, largest group of MD patients with respect to the following parameters: (1) absolute and (2) relative BoTX dosage, (3) number of treated muscles, and (4) inter-injection interval. We retrospectively assessed a treatment period of 20 years in 233 patients, who had received a cumulative dose of 68,540 MU of BoTX in 1819 treatment sessions, performed by two neurologists. Nonlinear correlation was used to analyze changes in the parameters over the course of repeated treatments. Post-hoc we applied a median-split to classify two subgroups (high-BoTX, low-BoTX) depending on the total amount of BoTX needed during treatment. Across all patients, we found a decrease of dosage for the first approximately 25 treatments with an increase afterwards. The number of muscles and inter-injection intervals increased with time with a discrete decrease of inter-injection intervals after about 35 treatments. Subgroup differences were observed in the amount of BoTX and inter-injection intervals, with continuously increasing inter-injection intervals and decreasing BoTX dosage in the low-BTX group. Both groups showed a continuously increasing number of injected muscles. In summary, we found nonlinear changes of BoTX dosage and inter-injection intervals and a continuously increasing number of injected muscles with treatment duration in TSD-patients. Furthermore, we, for the first time, identified two subgroups with distinct differences. Increasing inter-injection intervals and decreasing BoTX dosages in the low-BoTX group indicated improvement of symptoms with continued treatment. Continually increasing BoTX dosages with unchanged inter-injection intervals in the high-BoTX group indicated deterioration.https://www.mdpi.com/2072-6651/13/6/371botulinum toxin Along term treatmenttask-specific dystonianonlinear correlationinter-injection intervalmusician’s dystonia
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author André Lee
Jabreel Al-Sarea
Eckart Altenmüller
spellingShingle André Lee
Jabreel Al-Sarea
Eckart Altenmüller
Nonlinear Changes in Botulinum Toxin Treatment of Task-Specific Dystonia during Long-Term Treatment
Toxins
botulinum toxin A
long term treatment
task-specific dystonia
nonlinear correlation
inter-injection interval
musician’s dystonia
author_facet André Lee
Jabreel Al-Sarea
Eckart Altenmüller
author_sort André Lee
title Nonlinear Changes in Botulinum Toxin Treatment of Task-Specific Dystonia during Long-Term Treatment
title_short Nonlinear Changes in Botulinum Toxin Treatment of Task-Specific Dystonia during Long-Term Treatment
title_full Nonlinear Changes in Botulinum Toxin Treatment of Task-Specific Dystonia during Long-Term Treatment
title_fullStr Nonlinear Changes in Botulinum Toxin Treatment of Task-Specific Dystonia during Long-Term Treatment
title_full_unstemmed Nonlinear Changes in Botulinum Toxin Treatment of Task-Specific Dystonia during Long-Term Treatment
title_sort nonlinear changes in botulinum toxin treatment of task-specific dystonia during long-term treatment
publisher MDPI AG
series Toxins
issn 2072-6651
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Botulinum toxin (BoTX) is the standard treatment for task-specific dystonias (TSDs) such as musician’s dystonia (MD). Our aim was to assess the long-term changes in BoTX treatment in a highly homogeneous and, to our knowledge, largest group of MD patients with respect to the following parameters: (1) absolute and (2) relative BoTX dosage, (3) number of treated muscles, and (4) inter-injection interval. We retrospectively assessed a treatment period of 20 years in 233 patients, who had received a cumulative dose of 68,540 MU of BoTX in 1819 treatment sessions, performed by two neurologists. Nonlinear correlation was used to analyze changes in the parameters over the course of repeated treatments. Post-hoc we applied a median-split to classify two subgroups (high-BoTX, low-BoTX) depending on the total amount of BoTX needed during treatment. Across all patients, we found a decrease of dosage for the first approximately 25 treatments with an increase afterwards. The number of muscles and inter-injection intervals increased with time with a discrete decrease of inter-injection intervals after about 35 treatments. Subgroup differences were observed in the amount of BoTX and inter-injection intervals, with continuously increasing inter-injection intervals and decreasing BoTX dosage in the low-BTX group. Both groups showed a continuously increasing number of injected muscles. In summary, we found nonlinear changes of BoTX dosage and inter-injection intervals and a continuously increasing number of injected muscles with treatment duration in TSD-patients. Furthermore, we, for the first time, identified two subgroups with distinct differences. Increasing inter-injection intervals and decreasing BoTX dosages in the low-BoTX group indicated improvement of symptoms with continued treatment. Continually increasing BoTX dosages with unchanged inter-injection intervals in the high-BoTX group indicated deterioration.
topic botulinum toxin A
long term treatment
task-specific dystonia
nonlinear correlation
inter-injection interval
musician’s dystonia
url https://www.mdpi.com/2072-6651/13/6/371
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