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临床实践指南:突发性聋(更新)执行摘要。

Clinical Practice Guideline: Sudden Hearing Loss (Update) Executive Summary.

机构信息

1 ENT & Allergy Associates, LLP, New York, New York, USA.

2 Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra-Northwell, Hempstead, New York, USA.

出版信息

Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 2019 Aug;161(2):195-210. doi: 10.1177/0194599819859883.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

Sudden hearing loss is a frightening symptom that often prompts an urgent or emergent visit to a health care provider. It is frequently, but not universally, accompanied by tinnitus and/or vertigo. Sudden sensorineural hearing loss affects 5 to 27 per 100,000 people annually, with about 66,000 new cases per year in the United States. This guideline update provides evidence-based recommendations for the diagnosis, management, and follow-up of patients who present with sudden hearing loss. It focuses on sudden sensorineural hearing loss in adult patients aged 18 and over and primarily on those with idiopathic sudden sensorineural hearing loss. Prompt recognition and management of sudden sensorineural hearing loss may improve hearing recovery and patient quality of life. The guideline update is intended for all clinicians who diagnose or manage adult patients who present with sudden hearing loss.

PURPOSE

The purpose of this guideline update is to provide clinicians with evidence-based recommendations in evaluating patients with sudden hearing loss and sudden sensorineural hearing loss, with particular emphasis on managing idiopathic sudden sensorineural hearing loss. The guideline update group recognized that patients enter the health care system with sudden hearing loss as a nonspecific primary complaint. Therefore, the initial recommendations of this guideline update address distinguishing sensorineural hearing loss from conductive hearing loss at the time of presentation with hearing loss. They also clarify the need to identify rare, nonidiopathic sudden sensorineural hearing loss to help separate those patients from those with idiopathic sudden sensorineural hearing loss, who are the target population for the therapeutic interventions that make up the bulk of the guideline update. By focusing on opportunities for quality improvement, this guideline should improve diagnostic accuracy, facilitate prompt intervention, decrease variations in management, reduce unnecessary tests and imaging procedures, and improve hearing and rehabilitative outcomes for affected patients.

METHODS

Consistent with the American Academy of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery Foundation's , the guideline update group was convened with representation from the disciplines of otolaryngology-head and neck surgery, otology, neurotology, family medicine, audiology, emergency medicine, neurology, radiology, advanced practice nursing, and consumer advocacy. A systematic review of the literature was performed, and the prior clinical practice guideline on sudden hearing loss was reviewed in detail. Key action statements (KASs) were updated with new literature, and evidence profiles were brought up to the current standard. Research needs identified in the original clinical practice guideline and data addressing them were reviewed. Current research needs were identified and delineated.

RESULTS

The guideline update group made strong recommendations for the following: clinicians should distinguish sensorineural hearing loss from conductive hearing loss when a patient first presents with sudden hearing loss (KAS 1); clinicians should educate patients with sudden sensorineural hearing loss about the natural history of the condition, the benefits and risks of medical interventions, and the limitations of existing evidence regarding efficacy (KAS 7); and clinicians should counsel patients with sudden sensorineural hearing loss who have residual hearing loss and/or tinnitus about the possible benefits of audiological rehabilitation and other supportive measures (KAS 13). These strong recommendations were modified from the initial clinical practice guideline for clarity and timing of intervention. The guideline update group made strong recommendation against the following: clinicians should order routine computed tomography of the head in the initial evaluation of a patient with presumptive sudden sensorineural hearing loss (KAS 3); clinicians should obtain routine laboratory tests in patients with sudden sensorineural hearing loss (KAS 5); and clinicians should routinely prescribe antivirals, thrombolytics, vasodilators, or vasoactive substances to patients with sudden sensorineural hearing loss (KAS 11). The guideline update group made recommendations for the following: clinicians should assess patients with presumptive sudden sensorineural hearing loss through history and physical examination for bilateral sudden hearing loss, recurrent episodes of sudden hearing loss, and/or focal neurologic findings (KAS 2); in patients with sudden hearing loss, clinicians should obtain, or refer to a clinician who can obtain, audiometry as soon as possible (within 14 days of symptom onset) to confirm the diagnosis of sudden sensorineural hearing loss (KAS 4); clinicians should evaluate patients with sudden sensorineural hearing loss for retrocochlear pathology by obtaining a magnetic resonance imaging or auditory brainstem response (KAS 6); clinicians should offer, or refer to a clinician who can offer, intratympanic steroid therapy when patients have incomplete recovery from sudden sensorineural hearing loss 2 to 6 weeks after onset of symptoms (KAS 10); and clinicians should obtain follow-up audiometric evaluation for patients with sudden sensorineural hearing loss at the conclusion of treatment and within 6 months of completion of treatment (KAS 12). These recommendations were clarified in terms of timing of intervention and audiometry, as well as method of retrocochlear workup. The guideline update group offered the following KASs as options: clinicians may offer corticosteroids as initial therapy to patients with sudden sensorineural hearing loss within 2 weeks of symptom onset (KAS 8); clinicians may offer, or refer to a clinician who can offer, hyperbaric oxygen therapy combined with steroid therapy within 2 weeks of onset of sudden sensorineural hearing loss (KAS 9a); and clinicians may offer, or refer to a clinician who can offer, hyperbaric oxygen therapy combined with steroid therapy as salvage therapy within 1 month of onset of sudden sensorineural hearing loss (KAS 9b).

DIFFERENCES FROM PRIOR GUIDELINE

Incorporation of new evidence profiles to include quality improvement opportunities, confidence in the evidence, and differences of opinion Included 10 clinical practice guidelines, 29 new systematic reviews, and 36 new randomized controlled trials Highlights the urgency of evaluation and initiation of treatment, if treatment is offered, by emphasizing the time from symptom occurrence Clarification of terminology by changing potentially unclear statements; use of the term to mean idiopathic sudden sensorineural hearing loss to emphasize that over 90% of sudden sensorineural hearing loss is idiopathic sudden sensorineural hearing loss and to avoid confusion in nomenclature for the reader Changes to the key action statements (KASs) from the original guideline: KAS 1: When a patient first presents with sudden hearing loss, conductive hearing loss should be distinguished from sensorineural. KAS 2: The utility of history and physical examination when assessing for modifying factors is emphasized. KAS 3: The word is added to clarify that this statement addresses a nontargeted head computed tomography scan that is often ordered in the emergency room setting for patients presenting with sudden hearing loss. It does not refer to targeted scans such as a temporal bone computed tomography scan to assess for temporal bone pathology. KAS 4: The importance of audiometric confirmation of hearing status as soon as possible and within 14 days of symptom onset is emphasized. KAS 5: New studies were added to confirm the lack of benefit of nontargeted laboratory testing in sudden sensorineural hearing loss. KAS 6: Audiometric follow-up is excluded as a reasonable workup for retrocochlear pathology. Magnetic resonance imaging, computed tomography scan if magnetic resonance imaging cannot be done, or, secondarily, auditory brainstem response evaluation are the modalities recommended. A time frame for such testing is not specified, nor is it specified which clinician should be ordering this workup; however, it is implied that it would be the general or subspecialty otolaryngologist. KAS 7: The importance of shared decision making is highlighted, and salient points are emphasized. KAS 8: The option for corticosteroid intervention within 2 weeks of symptom onset is emphasized. KAS 9: Changed to KAS 9a and 9b; hyperbaric oxygen therapy remains an option but only when combined with steroid therapy for either initial treatment (9a) or for salvage therapy (9b). The timing is within 2 weeks of onset for initial therapy and within 1 month of onset of sudden sensorineural hearing loss for salvage therapy. KAS 10: Intratympanic steroid therapy for salvage is recommended within 2 to 6 weeks following onset of sudden sensorineural hearing loss. The time to treatment is defined and emphasized. KAS 11: Antioxidants were removed from the list of interventions that the clinical practice guideline recommends against using. KAS 12: Follow-up audiometry at conclusion of treatment and also within 6 months posttreatment is added. KAS 13: This statement on audiologic rehabilitation includes patients who have residual hearing loss and/or tinnitus who may benefit from treatment. Addition of an algorithm outlining KASs Enhanced emphasis on patient education and shared decision making with tools provided to assist in the same.

摘要

指南名称:成人突发性聋诊断和治疗指南(2023 年)

一、背景

突发性聋是一种常见的耳鼻喉科急症,以单侧或双侧、突发、进行性或波动性、原因不明的感音神经性听力损失为主要特征,常伴有耳鸣和(或)眩晕。其发病率为 5~27/100000 人/年,在美国每年约有 66000 例新发病例[1]。本指南旨在为突发性聋患者的诊断、管理和随访提供循证推荐意见,主要关注成人突发性聋患者(年龄≥18 岁),尤其是特发性突发性聋患者。及时识别和治疗突发性聋可能有助于改善患者的听力恢复和生活质量。本指南适用于所有诊断和管理突发性聋患者的临床医生。

二、目的

本指南更新的目的是为突发性聋和特发性突发性聋患者的临床医生提供循证推荐意见,特别强调管理特发性突发性聋。指南更新小组认识到,患者以突发性听力损失为非特异性主要主诉进入医疗系统。因此,本指南更新的初始推荐意见旨在区分感音神经性听力损失和传导性听力损失,这是突发性聋的初始评估的一部分。这些推荐意见还明确了识别罕见的非特发性突发性聋的必要性,以帮助将这些患者与特发性突发性聋患者区分开来,特发性突发性聋患者是治疗干预的目标人群,这些干预措施构成了本指南更新的大部分内容。通过关注质量改进机会,本指南应能提高诊断准确性,促进及时干预,减少管理差异,减少不必要的检查和影像学程序,并改善受影响患者的听力和康复结果。

三、方法

本指南更新组由耳鼻喉科-头颈外科、耳科、神经耳科、家庭医学、听力学、急诊医学、神经病学、放射学、高级实践护理和消费者权益倡导等领域的代表组成,与美国耳鼻喉科学会-头颈外科学会基金会的方法一致。对文献进行了系统评价,并详细回顾了先前的突发性聋临床实践指南。新的关键行动陈述(KASs)是基于新的文献更新的,证据概况也更新到了当前的标准。对原始临床实践指南中确定的研究需求和解决这些需求的数据进行了回顾。确定了当前的研究需求,并进行了阐述。

四、结果

指南更新组强烈推荐以下措施

临床医生应在患者首次出现突发性听力损失时区分感音神经性听力损失和传导性听力损失(KAS 1);临床医生应向特发性突发性聋患者讲述病情的自然史、医学干预的益处和风险,以及疗效的现有证据的局限性(KAS 7);临床医生应向特发性突发性聋患者提供听力康复和其他支持性措施的益处,并向那些有残余听力损失和(或)耳鸣的患者提供这些措施(KAS 13)。这些强烈推荐意见是为了澄清和干预的时机而从最初的临床实践指南中修改的。指南更新组强烈反对以下措施:临床医生不应常规在疑似特发性突发性聋患者的初始评估中进行头部计算机断层扫描(KAS 3);临床医生不应常规进行疑似突发性聋患者的实验室检查(KAS 5);临床医生不应常规开具抗病毒药物、溶栓药物、血管扩张剂或血管活性物质治疗突发性聋患者(KAS 11)。指南更新组还提出了以下推荐意见:临床医生应通过病史和体格检查,评估疑似特发性突发性聋患者是否有双侧突发性聋、反复发作的突发性聋和/或局灶性神经学发现(KAS 2);在突发性听力损失患者中,临床医生应尽快(症状出现后 14 天内)获得听力图以确认突发性聋的诊断(KAS 4);临床医生应评估突发性聋患者是否有耳蜗后病变,通过获取磁共振成像或听觉脑干反应(KAS 6);临床医生应在突发性聋患者出现不完全恢复后 2 至 6 周内(症状出现后 2 至 6 周)提供或转介给能够提供经鼓室内类固醇治疗的医生,以提供经鼓室内类固醇治疗(KAS 10);在突发性聋患者治疗结束时和治疗结束后 6 个月内,临床医生应进行突发性聋患者的随访听力评估(KAS 12)。这些建议在干预和听力评估的时间以及耳蜗后工作的方法上进行了澄清。指南更新组还提供了以下 KAS 选项:临床医生可以在症状出现后 2 周内为突发性聋患者提供皮质类固醇作为初始治疗(KAS 8);临床医生可以在突发性聋患者出现症状后 2 周内提供或转介能够提供高压氧治疗联合类固醇治疗的医生(KAS 9a);临床医生可以在突发性聋患者出现症状后 1 个月内提供或转介能够提供高压氧治疗联合类固醇治疗的医生,作为抢救治疗(KAS 9b)。

五、与先前指南的区别

本指南更新与先前的指南相比,有以下几个主要区别:

  • 纳入了新的证据概况,包括质量改进机会、证据的可信度和不同的意见。

  • 包括了 10 项临床实践指南、29 项新的系统评价和 36 项新的随机对照试验。

  • 强调了评估和治疗的紧迫性,突出了治疗的及时性,强调了从症状发生到开始治疗的时间。

  • 对术语进行了澄清,通过改变潜在不明确的表述,使用“特发性突发性聋”来更准确地描述病因,避免了在命名上的混淆。

  • 对关键行动陈述(KASs)进行了修改,从最初的指南中删除了不必要的内容,并根据新的证据进行了更新。

  • 增加了一个新的算法,以指导临床医生进行决策。

  • 提供了工具和资源,以帮助临床医生进行患者教育和共享决策。

六、结论

本指南更新提供了成人突发性聋的诊断、管理和随访的循证推荐意见,强调了及时评估和治疗的重要性,以及共享决策的必要性。这些推荐意见旨在改善患者的听力恢复和生活质量。

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