Abstract
ObjectiveTo explore if observations on nasopharyngoscopy influence the surgical procedure selected for the management of velopharyngeal insufficiency (VPI).DesignCross-sectional survey.ParticipantsSeventeen surgeons with experience treating VPI.InterventionsReview of twenty-four nasopharyngoscopy videos with a combination of velopharyngeal closure patterns and gap sizes.Main Outcome MeasuresSurgical procedure was selected after watching a nasopharyngoscopy video. Chi-square tests were used to evaluate if, for each surgeon, procedure selection varied based on closure pattern and gap size combination. Variable importance scores were obtained from a random forest analysis to quantify contribution of nasopharyngoscopy observations on procedure selection.ResultsFour procedures accounted for 86% of all surgeries selected: Furlow double-opposing Z-Plasty (33%), palatal lengthening using buccal myomucosal flaps (20%), pharyngeal flap (19%), and sphincter pharyngoplasty (14%). Four surgeons (23.5%) significantly varied their surgical selection when different closure pattern and gap size combinations were shown on nasopharyngoscopy. Ten surgeons (58%) selected the same procedure in ≥ 50% of the 24 nasopharyngoscopy videos. Individual surgeon preference was the strongest predictor of surgical selection, accounting for 57.9% of surgical selection variance. Velopharyngeal gap size accounted for 36.5% of the variance in surgical selection, yet the specific surgeries selected based on gap size varied widely across surgeons. Closure pattern was a weak predictor, contributing 5.6% to surgical selection variance.ConclusionsNasopharyngoscopy findings influence VPI surgical procedure selection in a highly individualized, surgeon-specific manner. Among factors observed on nasopharyngoscopy, velopharyngeal gap size has a much larger influence on procedure selection than closure pattern.