Vol. 6 No. 1 (2026)
Health Technology Reviews

Botulinum Toxin A Product Comparison for Upper Limb Spasticity, Lower Limb Spasticity, and Cervical Dystonia

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Published January 9, 2026

Key Messages

What Is the Issue?

  • BoNT-A has been used to treat excessive muscle contractility in patients with movement disorders, including CD and spastic conditions, as well as for cosmetic purposes. Health Canada has approved 3 BoNT-A products for various therapeutic uses: onaBoNT-A, aboBoNT-A, and incoBoNT-A.
  • Decision-makers are interested in understanding the comparative clinical efficacy and safety of these products and the clinical effectiveness and safety of switching from 1 product to another in pediatric and adult patients with limb spasticity or CD. They are also interested in recommendations from evidence-based guidelines on the use of BoNT‑A products for these indications in children and adults.

What Did We Do?

  • We searched key resources, including journal citation databases, and conducted a focused internet search for relevant evidence published since 2013.

What Did We Find?

  • Clinical evidence suggests that onaBoNT-A and aboBoNT-A are comparatively effective and safe for the treatment of limb spasticity in children. OnaBoNT-A, aboBoNT-A, and incoBoNT-A are comparable in terms of efficacy and safety for the treatment of CD in adults.
  • Switching from onaBoNT-A or aboBoNT-A due to treatment failure to incoBoNT-A in adult patients with CD is possible.
  • Evidence-based guidelines recommend onaBoNT-A, aboBoNT-A, and incoBoNT-A as treatment options for upper limb spasticity, lower limb spasticity, and CD in adults.

What Does This Mean?

  • OnaBoNT-A, aboBoNT-A, and incoBoNT-A can be used to treat upper and lower limb spasticity in children and adults and CD in adults. Switching between products is possible, provided that the recommended conversion ratios are applied.