Speech Treatment for People with Cerebellar Multiple System Atrophy (MSA-C): A Pilot Randomised Controlled Trial of Two Approaches
Anja Lowit, Kaiyue Xing, D. Priya Shanmugarajah, Emma Foster, Suzanna Duty, David Young, Jan Stanier, Christopher Kobylecki, Marios Hadjivassiliou

TL;DR
This study tested two speech treatments for people with MSA-C, finding both feasible and acceptable, with some communication improvements observed.
Contribution
The study introduces and evaluates ClearSpeechTogether, a novel speech treatment approach for MSA-C patients.
Findings
Both treatments were feasible and acceptable to participants.
Communication confidence and participation improved in both groups.
Results suggest speech therapy benefits MSA-C patients even at severe disease stages.
Abstract
Speech problems are an early feature of Multiple System Atrophy (MSA). They can lead to social withdrawal and have significant impact on people’s quality of life. There is a considerable lack of clinical trials and clinicians lack guidance on how best to support this population. This project aimed to establish the feasibility and acceptability of a novel treatment approach, ClearSpeechTogether, in patients with the cerebellar variant of MSA (MSA-C), and to pilot an RCT comparing this treatment to standard speech and language therapy (SLT) treatment (ST). We recruited 24 patients with clinically probable MSA-C and dysarthria who were randomised to either treatment arm. Full data were available for 9 participants for ST, and 11 for ClearSpeechTogether. Both interventions lasted 6 weeks, ST offered 1 h of individual therapy a week, ClearSpeechTogether provided four individual therapy…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVoice and Speech Disorders · Parkinson's Disease Mechanisms and Treatments · Neurological disorders and treatments
