Unilateral Deafness Clinical Trial
Official title:
Comparison of BAHA and CROS Hearing Aid in Single-Sided Deafness
People with single-sided deafness (SSD) have significant hearing loss in one ear and normal
or near normal hearing in the other ear. Those living with SSD experience several
communication difficulties, particularly when listening to speech in the presence of
background noise. This problem is worse in situations where the noise is on the side of the
good ear and the speech is on the side of the poor ear.
The Bone-Anchored Hearing Aid (BAHA) and the Contralateral Routing of Signals (CROS) hearing
aid are two devices designed to improve hearing in people who have significant hearing loss
in one ear only. The BAHA is a surgically implanted device which also includes an external
processor; sounds from the poor ear are transmitted to the good ear through skull
vibrations. The CROS does not involve surgery; instead a hearing aid is fitted behind each
ear, and the sounds on the side of the poor ear are wirelessly transmitted to the good ear.
The majority of previous studies comparing the BAHA to the CROS have used older CROS models
with basic technology and a wire along the neck to send sounds from the poor ear to the good
ear. There is a lack of studies comparing newer digital wireless CROS hearing aids to the
BAHA. The current research will compare the effect of the BAHA and CROS hearing aid on
speech perception scores when listening to speech in quiet and in noise. The research will
also investigate patients' reported benefits with each device during everyday situations. In
order to compare the BAHA and CROS, individuals who already have been implanted with a BAHA
will be given a trial period with a new wireless digital CROS hearing aid.
The research hypothesis states that the CROS hearing aid will be as equally beneficial or
greater than the BAHA in improving hearing and patient benefit. If the findings support the
hypothesis that the CROS offers just as much benefits as the BAHA, or is an even better
alternative, more patients may choose to avoid surgery and decide to receive a CROS hearing
aid instead.
Users of BAHA will be given a 2-week trial period with the Unitron Tandem CROS hearing aid.
Participants will be randomly assigned to wear either their BAHA for two weeks or the trial
CROS for two weeks. There will be a total of three visits made to the clinic.
During each visit:
- Participants' hearing will be tested (either with the BAHA, the CROS, or without
wearing any device).
- Speech perception ability will be tested in quiet and in noise conditions (either while
wearing the BAHA, the CROS, or no device).
- Participants will be asked to complete two standardized questionnaires on the perceived
benefits that the BAHA or the CROS provides.
In addition, participants will be asked to fill out a short diary form every day, for a
two-week period, to report the situations in which they wore the device.
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Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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