RESUMEN
OBJECTIVES: To determine whether long term (>48 months) symptomatic vertigo control is sustained in patients with Menière's disease from a previous comparative trial of intratympanic methylprednisolone versus gentamicin, and if the two treatments remain nonsignificantly different at long-term follow-up. STUDY DESIGN: Mail survey recording vertigo frequency in the previous one and six months, further intratympanic treatment received, and validated symptom questionnaires. SETTING: Outpatient hospital clinic setting. PATIENTS: Adult patients with definite unilateral refractory Menière's disease, who previously received intratympanic treatment in a comparative trial. INTERVENTION: A survey of trial participants who received intratympanic gentamicin (40âmg/mL) or methylprednisolone (62.5âmg/mL). OUTCOME MEASURES: Primary: number of vertigo attacks in the 6 months prior to receiving this survey compared with the 6 months before the first trial injection. Secondary number of vertigo attacks over the previous 1 month; validated symptom questionnaire scores of tinnitus, dizziness, vertigo, aural fullness, and functional disability. RESULTS: Forty six of the 60 original trial patients (77%) completed the survey, 24 from the gentamicin and 22 from the methylprednisolone group. Average follow-up was 70.8 months (standard deviation 17.0) from the first treatment injection. Vertigo attacks in the 6 months prior to receiving the current survey reduced by 95% compared to baseline in both drug groups (intention-to-treat analysis, both pâ<â0.001). No significant difference between drugs was found for the primary and secondary outcomes. Eight participants (methylprednisoloneâ=â5 and gentamicinâ=â3) required further injections for relapse after completing the original trial. CONCLUSION: Intratympanic methylprednisolone treatment provides effective long-lasting relief of vertigo, without the known inner-ear toxicity associated with gentamicin. There are no significant differences between the two treatments at long term follow-up.