Abstract

Hearing loss not only has a significant impact on the quality of life of patients and society, but its correlation with cognitive decline in an aging population will also increase the risk of incident dementia. While current management of hearing loss is focused on hearing rehabilitation (and essentially symptomatic), patients are suffering from the burden of progressive hearing loss before hearing aids or cochlear implants are fitted. Although these devices have a significant effect on speech understanding, they do not always lead to normal speech understanding, especially in noisy environments. A significant number of patients suffer from autosomal dominantly inherited disorders that can produce progressive sensorineural hearing loss. This includes DFNA9, a disorder caused by pathologic variants in the COCH gene that leads to post-lingual profound sensorineural hearing loss and bilateral vestibulopathy. Carriers of a pathogenic variant leading to DFNA9 can be diagnosed at the pre-symptomatic or early symptomatic stage which creates a window of opportunity for treatment. Preventing hearing loss from occurring or stabilizing progression would provide the opportunity to avoid hearing aids or cochlear implants and would be able to reduce the increased incidence of dementia. While innovative therapies for restoration of hearing have been studied for restoration of hearing in case of severe-to-profound sensorineural hearing loss and congenital hearing loss, further research is needed to study how we can modify disease progression in late-onset autosomal dominant hereditary sensorineural hearing loss. Recently, gene editing strategies have been explored in autosomal dominant disorders to disrupt dominant mutations selectively without affecting wild-type alleles.

Highlights

  • Hearing loss has a significant impact on quality of life and society in general

  • Hearing impairment is the most frequent sensory deficit, affecting 360 million people worldwide and it has been listed by the World Health Organization (WHO) as one of the priority diseases for research into therapeutic interventions to address public health needs [1]

  • Treatment is currently focused on hearing rehabilitation, which means fitting hearing aids that amplify sounds in case of moderate-to-severe sensorineural hearing loss [2, 3]

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Summary

Introduction

Hearing loss has a significant impact on quality of life and society in general. Hearing impairment is the most frequent sensory deficit, affecting 360 million people worldwide and it has been listed by the World Health Organization (WHO) as one of the priority diseases for research into therapeutic interventions to address public health needs [1]. No disease-modifying therapies are available to slow down or prevent progressive sensorineural hearing loss from happening. Many studies have confirmed significant improvement in speech understanding after cochlear implantation, even in aging patients, many potential adult CI candidates are unaware of this treatment option or opt out, with

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