Audiology in the sudden hearing loss clinical trial.

Journal: Otology & Neurotology : Official Publication Of The American Otological Society, American Neurotology Society [And] European Academy Of Otology And Neurotology
Published:
Abstract

Objective: To report the pretreatment and posttreatment population characteristics and the overall stability of the audiologic outcomes found during the Sudden Hearing Loss Clinical Trial (ClinicalTrials.gov: Identifier NCT00097448).

Methods: Multicenter, prospective randomized noninferiority trial of oral versus intratympanic (IT) steroid treatment of sudden sensorineural hearing loss (SSNHL). Methods: Fifteen academically based otology practices. Methods: Two hundred fifty patients with unilateral SSNHL presenting within 14 days of onset with 50 dBHL or greater pure tone average hearing threshold in the affected ear. Methods: Either 60 mg/d oral prednisone for 14 days with a 5-day taper (121 patients) or 4 IT doses for 14 days of 40 mg/ml methylprednisolone (129 patients). Methods: Primary end point was change in hearing [dB PTA] at 2 months after treatment. Noninferiority was defined as less than 10 dB difference in hearing outcome between treatments. In this article, pretreatment and posttreatment hearing findings will be reported in detail.

Results: A general (and stable) effect of treatment and a specific effect of greater improvement at low frequencies were found in both treatment groups.

Conclusions: Hearing improvements are stable, and a significantly greater improvement occurs with lower frequency after either oral or IT steroid treatment of SSNHL.

Authors
Chris Halpin, Helen Shi, Domenic Reda, Patrick Antonelli, Seilesh Babu, John Carey, Bruce Gantz, Joel Goebel, Paul Hammerschlag, Jeffrey Harris, Brandon Isaacson, Daniel Lee, Chris Linstrom, Lorne Parnes, William Slattery, Steven Telian, Jeffrey Vrabec, Steven Rauch
Relevant Conditions

Hearing Loss