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. 2024 Aug 29;183(11):4735–4745. doi: 10.1007/s00431-024-05735-9

What is Known:

The advent of disease-modifying therapies is increasingly changing the approach to swallowing and nutritional management in type I SMA.

Clinical trials and real-world data using all three disease-modifying therapies report a rather wide variability of feeding outcome and need for tube feeding that is often related to different cohorts that makes comparison between studies very difficult.

What is New:

The real-world findings of this study, including all the children treated since treatments became available, confirmed that the need for tube feeding is not an invariable finding.

The level of feeding involvement at baseline appears to be a reliable prognostic indicator of bulbar outcome.

The results highlight the need for interventional studies with structured Speech and Language Therapist protocols that will help to better understand the extent to which bulbar function can be maintained or regained even in children requiring tube feeding.