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Epidemiology of Acute Otomastoiditis in Pediatric Age

Epidemiology of Acute Otomastoiditis in Pediatric Age

Recruiting
14 years and younger
All
Phase N/A

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Overview

It was decided to conduct this study because there are no standardized guidelines. regarding the management of acute otomastoiditis. The aim of the study is to describe the epidemiology of otomastoiditis in order to outline the scientific and rational basis necessary to standardize the diagnostic and therapeutic approach to this condition in order to reduce the diagnostic delay and improve the therapeutic outcome. It also aims to evaluate the effectiveness of different treatment modalities and identify possible risk factors associated with complications.

Description

Acute otomastoiditis is the main suppurative complication of acute otitis media (OMA) and is secondary to the extension of the inflammatory process from the middle ear to the mastoid process of the temporal bone through a narrow canal, termed aditus ad antrum, which in the youngest child is more likely to be obstructed (due to the absence of pneumatization of the mastoid).1,2 Rarely, mastoiditis can occur even in the absence of signs and symptoms suggestive of OMA.3 Currently, risk factors leading to the evolution of OMA into otomastoiditis are not known in the literature, so the debate on the proper management of the single episode of otitis as a preventive strategy is still very much alive, also in light of the extreme frequency of OMA in pediatric age, its frequent self-resolution and the rarity of its complications. In particular, acute otomastoiditis remains a rare complication; in fact, it is estimated that the percentage of OMA that goes on to evolve into otomastoiditis is 0.24%.

The annual incidence of acute mastoiditis has been greatly reduced since the introduction of antibiotic therapy and is estimated to be between 1.2 and 4.2 cases per 100,000 children in industrialized countries.

Over the past decades, several scientific societies have updated guidelines for the management of OMA in order to reduce the overprescription of antibiotics and the consequent increase in drug resistance.In the latest Italian guidelines, the strategy of watchful waiting, i.e., clinical observation for the first 48-72 hours after symptom onset, has been confirmed only in children older than 2 years with mild monolateral, severe monolateral, and mild bilateral OMA. According to some authors, this treatment choice did not impact the incidence of complications, particularly otomastoiditis, but conflicting opinions exist in the literature.

In recent years, numerous studies have documented an increasing trend in the incidence of acute otomastoiditis, in particular, a study conducted from 2002 to 2013 at 25 hospitals in our country documented an increase in the annual number of acute otomastoiditis in patients older than 4 years.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Patients aged ≤14 years with an established diagnosis of acute otomastoiditis

Exclusion Criteria:

  • NA

Study details
    Otomastoiditis

NCT06767267

IRCCS Azienda Ospedaliero-Universitaria di Bologna

14 January 2025

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