Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

The objective of this study is to investigate benefits of binaural hearing for non-traditional cochlear implant candidates (with Asymmetric Hearing Loss). Asymmetric candidates are patients with severe to profound hearing loss in one ear and better hearing in the other ear. (One ear is deaf and the other ear has better hearing and in most cases uses a hearing aid.) The investigators hypothesize that cochlear implantation of the poorer ear provides a functional increase in word and sentence understanding in quiet or noise, perceived benefit, localization ability, and other measures of auditory performance relative to use of the better hearing ear alone.


Clinical Trial Description

Multichannel cochlear implants have been highly successful in restoring speech understanding in adults and children who have congenital or acquired bilateral profound or severe-to-profound sensorineural (permanent) hearing loss. As implant technology has continued to develop and post-implant performance of patients has improved, the patient selection criteria has broadened to include patients with less severe hearing loss. Further, results from studies where patients received bilateral cochlear implants have demonstrated not only improved performance but the feasibility of integrating signals from both ears.

In contrast to persons with bilateral severe-to-profound hearing loss, persons who have only one ear with profound or severe-to-profound hearing loss and the other ear with substantially less hearing loss have not, to date, been considered cochlear implant candidates. This is because it has been assumed they will do well enough with a conventional hearing aid in the better ear. A problem with this assumption is that even with an appropriately fit better ear hearing aid, many of these hearing-impaired individuals still experience significant difficulties in speech understanding in their everyday listening environments, along with significant communication handicaps that interfere with their employment and quality of life.

Previous studies that have examined the performance of patients who have more symmetrical hearing loss and who wear a cochlear implant on one ear and a power hearing aid on the other ear, have illustrated that the two inputs can be combined and provide binaural hearing benefits. It is hypothesized in this study that patients with an asymmetrical sensorineural hearing loss may also receive significant binaural benefit from having a cochlear implant on the poorer ear along with an appropriately fit hearing aid on the better ear. That is, this study examines whether patients with asymmetrical sensorineural hearing loss can utilize both types of input (acoustic to one ear and electric to the other) effectively, and combine them to receive binaural hearing assistance for improving speech understanding, localization ability, and patient satisfaction. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT02004535
Study type Interventional
Source Washington University School of Medicine
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date April 2006
Completion date July 2019

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Recruiting NCT04696835 - fNIRS in Pediatric Hearing Aids N/A
Completed NCT03662256 - Reducing Childhood Hearing Loss in Rural Alaska Through a Preschool Screening and Referral Process Using Mobile Health and Telemedicine N/A
Completed NCT04602780 - Evaluating the Revised WORQ in CI Users
Completed NCT03723161 - Evaluation of the Ponto Bone Anchored Hearing System in a Pediatric Atresia Population
Completed NCT05086809 - Investigation of an Updated Bone-anchored Sound Processor N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT03548779 - North Carolina Genomic Evaluation by Next-generation Exome Sequencing, 2 N/A
Completed NCT03428841 - Audiovisual Assessment After Dural Puncture During Epidural Placement in Obstetric Patients N/A
Completed NCT04559282 - Home Test of New Sound Processor N/A
Enrolling by invitation NCT03345654 - Individually-guided Hearing Aid Fitting
Completed NCT06016335 - MRI-based Synthetic CT Images of the Head and Neck N/A
Completed NCT05165121 - Comparison of Hearing Aid Fitting Outcomes Between Self-fit and Professional Fit for MDHearing Smart Hearing Aids N/A
Recruiting NCT05533840 - Establishment and Application of a New Imaging System for Otology Based on Ultra-high Resolution CT
Completed NCT04622059 - AUditive Direct In-utero Observation (AUDIO): Prenatal Testing of Congenital Hypoacusis N/A
Terminated NCT02294812 - Effects of Cognitive Training on Speech Perception N/A
Recruiting NCT02558478 - Identification of New Genes Implicated in Rare Neurosensory Diseases by Whole Exome Sequencing N/A
Withdrawn NCT02740322 - Validating the Hum Test N/A
Completed NCT01963104 - Community-Based Kiosks for Hearing Screening and Education N/A
Completed NCT01892007 - Evaluation of Cogmed Working Memory Training for Adult Hearing Aid Users N/A
Completed NCT01857661 - The Influence of the Sound Generator Combined With Conventional Amplification for Tinnitus Control: Blind Randomized Clinical Trial N/A
Withdrawn NCT01223638 - The Prevalence of Hearing Loss Among Children With Congenital Hypothyroidism N/A