Abstract

AbstractBackgroundHearing loss has been identified as the largest potentially modifiable risk factor for dementia and affects 50% adults aged 50‐64 years, and 70% aged 70 years and older. The quality of evidence the effect of hearing aid use on cognition in older adults is currently poor due to methodological limitations. Few studies have objectively studied these outcomes beyond 6‐12 months. This prospective longitudinal observational cohort study investigated the effects of hearing aid use on cognitive performance in older adults over 3 years.Method183 first‐time hearing aid users aged 60 years and older with mild to severe hearing loss were assessed using gold standard measures before hearing aid fitting, with subsets of this group re‐assessed after 18 and 36 months as they reached these timepoints. Outcomes for the treatment group were compared with those of participants of a large longitudinal cohort study of community‐living older adults (AIBL) using the same measures. Objective assessment measures included cognitive function, hearing loss, hearing aid use, genetic phenotyping, and speech perception. Subjective measures included hearing disability, mood, quality of life, social isolation, and loneliness.ResultThe treatment group showed good hearing aid compliance, significant improvement in speech perception (quiet and noise) and decreased self‐reported listening disability despite further significant hearing loss over the 3‐year follow‐up. There was significant improvement in cognitive performance from baseline for the treatment group versus the comparative group for working memory, attention, psychomotor function, and visual learning. Comparatively, AIBL participants showed statistically significant decline across all cognitive functions.ConclusionOlder adults with untreated hearing loss are expected to decline cognitively at 2‐5 times the rate of adults without hearing loss. Comparatively, cognitive performance in treated participants in this study instead improved after 3 years of hearing aid use, while the comparative group declined. These results suggest that treatment of hearing loss with hearing aids may delay cognitive decline.

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