Abstract

To investigate the microbial changes of long-term hearing aid use culture independently. Cross-sectional study. Fifty long-term hearing aid users and 80 volunteer controls with asymptomatic ears. External auditory canal (EAC) sampling with DNA-free swabs. Microbial communities in the samples were investigated with amplicon sequencing of the 16S rRNA gene. The final analysis contained 48 hearing aid users, 59 controls. Twenty-four samples were excluded because of low sequence count, recent use of antimicrobials and/or corticosteroids, recent cold, or missing health status. The groups showed significant differences in bacterial diversity (beta div., p = 0.011), and hearing aid users showed lower species richness than the control group (alpha div., p < 0.01). The most frequent findings in both groups were Staphylococcus auricularis , Alloiococcus otitis , Cutibacterium acnes , Corynebacterium otitidis , and Staphylococcus unclassified sp. Hearing aid users' samples presented more Corynebacterium tuberculostearicum than the control samples. Common EAC pathogens, such as Staphylococcus aureus or Pseudomonas aeruginosa were rare. Long-term hearing aid use lowers bacterial diversity and modulates the EAC microbiome. The changes mostly affect commensals. Lowered diversity may predispose individuals to EAC conditions and needs more research.

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