# Long-Term Velopharyngeal Insufficiency–Related Quality of Life in Cleft Palate Patients: Speech and Surgical Factors

**Authors:** Xiaobao Dang, Hongzheng Gu, Xin Zhao, Ruiqing Jiang, Hanyao Huang, Karim Ahmed Sakran

PMC · DOI: 10.1016/j.identj.2025.109354 · International Dental Journal · 2026-01-10

## TL;DR

This study finds that speech issues and surgical complications like oronasal fistulas significantly impact the quality of life for cleft palate patients with velopharyngeal insufficiency.

## Contribution

The study identifies speech intelligibility and oronasal fistulas as key predictors of poor quality of life in cleft palate patients with VPI.

## Key findings

- Older age at surgery and oronasal fistulas are linked to lower quality of life in cleft palate patients.
- Speech intelligibility deficits independently predict poor VPI-related quality of life.
- Timely surgery and prevention of complications improve functional and psychosocial outcomes.

## Abstract

Velopharyngeal insufficiency (VPI) is a common functional complication in patients with cleft palate, often resulting in impaired speech, social difficulty, and psychosocial distress. This study aims to assess VPI–related quality of life (VPI-QOL) in cleft palate patients after primary palatoplasty, and to identify clinical and functional predictors, particularly speech outcomes and postoperative complications, that significantly affect the perceived QOL.

This cross-sectional study involved 170 cleft palate patients assessed using the validated Chinese version of the VPI Effects on Life Outcomes (VELO) instrument. Both parent-proxy and youth self-reports were collected. Patients were stratified by QOL status into adequate and inadequate QOL groups. Demographic, surgical, and anatomical variables, along with professional speech evaluations, were analysed. Statistical comparisons used Chi-square and Mann–Whitney U tests, with multivariate logistic regression to identify independent predictors of poor QOL.

Among 170 patients, 107 (62.9%) had adequate and 63 (37.1%) had inadequate QOL. Inadequate QOL was associated with older age at surgery (mean 5.19 vs 1.98 years; P < .001) and at evaluation (P < .01). Oronasal fistula (ONF) occurred in 14.7%, and VPI in 30%. Delayed palatoplasty, presence of ONF, and poor speech intelligibility were significantly linked to lower VELO scores. ONF (odds ratio = 8.531, P < .001) and speech intelligibility deficits (odds ratio = 8.854, P < .001) were independent predictors of poor QOL. Patients with VPI reported significantly lower scores across all VELO domains. Youth and parental responses were generally consistent, with parents noting more pronounced emotional and social effects.

Speech deficits and postoperative complications, particularly ONF and reduced intelligibility, are major determinants of VPI-related QOL. Timely surgery, prevention of ONF, and targeted speech intervention are essential for optimizing both functional and psychosocial outcomes.

Speech intelligibility and ONF strongly influence VPI-QOL; early surgery, ONF management, speech therapy, and VELO use improve outcomes and guide multidisciplinary cleft care.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** cleft palate (MONDO:0016064)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** ONF (MESH:D005402), VPI (MESH:D014681), Speech deficits (MESH:D013064), Inadequate (MESH:D012892), Cleft Palate (MESH:D002972)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## References

32 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12818203/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12818203