Abstract

BackgroundThe standard therapy for patients suffering from sensorineural hearing loss is cochlear implantation. The insertion of the electrode array into the cochlea, with potential mechanical trauma and the presence of this foreign body inside the cochlea, may lead to free radical formation and reduced blood perfusion of the cochlea which can result in a loss of residual hearing. Studies have suggested that a particular combination of the antioxidants vitamins A, C and E as well as the vasodilator magnesium (together: ACEMg) may protect the residual hearing.MethodsThe potential protective effect of ACEMg on residual hearing preservation in cochlear implant (CI) patients was investigated in a single-centre, randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind phase II clinical trial. CI candidates with some residual hearing in low frequencies receiving MED-EL implants of different FLEX electrode array lengths were treated with ACEMg tablets or placebo respectively 2 days preoperatively and up to 3 months postoperatively. The study objective was to demonstrate that ACEMg is more efficacious than placebo in preserving residual hearing during cochlear implantation by comparing the hearing loss (change in hearing thresholds at 500 Hz from baseline) 3 months after the first fitting between the two treatment groups and to investigate the treatments’ safety.ResultsFifty-one patients were included in the study, which had to be terminated before the recruitment goal was reached because of IMP-resupply mismanagement of one partner. In the intention-to-treat population, 25 patients were treated with ACEMg and 24 patients with placebo. The mean hearing loss at 500 Hz was (± 15.84) 30.21 dB (placebo) or (± 17.56) 26.00 dB (ACEMg) 3 months after the initial fitting. Adjusting the postoperative hearing loss for the baseline residual hearing, planned electrode length and surgeon results in 8.01 dB reduced hearing loss in ACEMg-treated patients compared to placebo-treated ones. The safety analysis revealed that ACEMg was generally well-tolerated with adverse event frequencies below the placebo level.ConclusionThis is the first clinical trial investigating a drug effect on residual hearing in CI patients. These first-in-man data may suggest that a perioperative oral administration of ACEMg is safe and may provide protection of residual hearing in CI patients.Trial registrationEU Clinical Trial Register No. 2012-005002-22. Registered on 6 December 2013. Funding: European Commission FP7-HEALTH-2012-INNOVATION-2.

Highlights

  • The standard therapy for patients suffering from sensorineural hearing loss is cochlear implantation

  • Fifty-one patients were included in the study, which had to be terminated before the recruitment goal was reached because of IMP-resupply mismanagement of one partner

  • Adjusting the postoperative hearing loss for the baseline residual hearing, planned electrode length and surgeon results in 8.01 dB reduced hearing loss in Vitamins A (ACEMg)-treated patients compared to placebo-treated ones

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Summary

Introduction

The standard therapy for patients suffering from sensorineural hearing loss is cochlear implantation. The cochlear implant (CI) is the standard treatment for uni- and bilateral severe and profound sensorineural hearing loss, both in adults and children. Around 600, 000 deaf individuals have already received cochlear implantations worldwide [1]. The whole frequency range of the acoustic signal is split into different frequency bands and allocated to the different electrode contacts, mimicking the physiological tonotopic organization of the cochlea [2]. As speech understanding with the CI has improved, indication criteria have been extended towards patients with loss of hearing in the high frequencies and residual low-frequency hearing. Shorter and more flexible atraumatic electrodes have been designed to match the recipient’s individual cochlear anatomy to preserve its residual hearing [3]

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