Voice Disorders Clinical Trial
Official title:
Efficacy of Conversation Training Therapy (CTT)
Voice therapy is the standard-of-care for many of the nearly 140 million people in the United States who suffer from voice disorders,1 yet patients claim that current therapies are ineffective at meeting their voice needs.2 Published data by our research team indicate that patients think that transfer of target voice techniques to every day voice use (i.e. conversation) is the most difficult aspect of therapy,2 and that training techniques in conversation is the most useful aspect of voice therapy.2 Unfortunately, traditional voice therapy programs spend little, if any, time training voice techniques in conversation.3 This lack of functional specificity in voice therapy may contribute to the estimated 65% attrition rate.4 Even after some form of treatment, patients are still struggling with daily conversational voice use, and voice disorders continue to cause serious disability, stress and depression, which negatively affects social functioning and job performance.5 A new voice therapy program, Conversation Training Therapy (CTT), based on published patient reports on dissatisfaction with traditional therapy, was developed by the Investigators. It was honed with recommendations from expert clinical voice-specialized speech-language pathologists, and successfully piloted in a small case series of patients with voice problems. The investigators objective in this application is to test CTT in the rehabilitation of patients with voice disorders. The investigators hypothesize that, as demonstrated in the investigators preliminary case studies, these methods will result in early treatment success, and reduce the time required to reach therapeutic goals, thereby reducing costs associated with voice treatment.
Two common voice disorders, vocal fold lesions (lesions) and muscle tension dysphonia (MTD)
constitute over 60% of voice clinic caseloads. Over 80% of patients with lesions and nearly
100% of those with MTD are treated exclusively with voice therapy.7,8 Traditional, bottom-up
hierarchical, non-conversation based voice therapy is the established standard of care used
most widely by speech-language pathologists (SLP) in clinical practice.e.g.3,9,10 However,
the investigators group's published research indicated a clear need to target conversational
voice use in treatment.2 Currently, no treatment program exists with a focus on voice use in
conversation. Most voice therapy techniques are based in hierarchical, programmatic
approaches aimed at manipulating phonatory physiology for voice improvement. These
hierarchies necessitate that the final step in therapy is generalization of the target voice
techniques to spontaneous, conversational speech.3 Three major problems exist with this
approach to voice therapy, which the current proposal aims to address.
First, A hierarchical non-conversational approach to therapy builds treatment from unvoiced
breathing to single sounds and rote phrases to connected speech to spontaneous every day
conversation last, if at all, and patients are often discharged from therapy unable to
generalize therapy techniques to conversation. Second, the use of a hierarchical, bottom-up
approach necessitates a protracted time in treatment. Third, attrition rates for behavioral
voice therapy are estimated between 16-65%,4,17 and voice problem relapse rates are between
51-68%.
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