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7%) underwent clinical/instrumental swallowing assessments, of whom 95/138 (68.8%) had immediate postsurgical dysphagia. At last follow-up (1 month to 45 months), 15/95 (15.8%) had persistent dysphagia on instrumental assessment, 14/15 of whom had syndromes/neurodevelopmental delay. Time-to-event analysis revealed that for the nonsyndromic cohort, 25% had resolution of dysphagia by 4 months, 50% by 10 months, and 75% by 14 months. Cox proportional hazards regression revealed that the presence of underlying syndromes/neurodevelopmental