Department of Psychiatry, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, New York, USA.
New York State Psychiatric Institute, New York, New York, USA.
Int J Geriatr Psychiatry. 2020 Aug;35(8):842-850. doi: 10.1002/gps.5311. Epub 2020 Apr 23.
Age-related hearing loss (ARHL) is a prevalent condition associated with increased risk for depression and cognitive decline. This 12-week prospective, double-blind pilot randomized controlled trial (RCT) of hearing aids (HAs) for depressed older adults with ARHL evaluated the feasibility of a novel research design.
METHODS/DESIGN: N = 13 individuals aged ≥60 years with Major Depressive Disorder or Persistent Depressive Disorder and at least mild hearing loss (pure tone average ≥ 30 dB) were randomized to receive full- (active) vs low-amplification (sham) HAs added to psychiatric treatment as usual. Duration of HA use in hours/day, adverse events frequency, attrition rate, and maintenance of the study blinding were the primary outcome measures.
Compliance with HAs was excellent (>9 hours/day for both groups) and rates of adverse events and drop-outs did not differ between groups. Preliminary data demonstrated differential improvement for active vs sham HAs on hearing functioning (Hearing Handicap Inventory for the Elderly [nonparametric effect size (np-ES) = 0.62]), depressive symptoms (Inventory for Depressive Symptomatology [np-ES = 0.31]), cognition (Repeatable Battery for the Assessment of Neuropsychological Status Immediate Memory [np-ES = 0.25]), and general functioning (World Health Organization Disability Assessment Schedule [np-ES = 0.53]). Significantly greater than 50% of both groups correctly guessed their treatment assignment, indicating incomplete concealment of treatment allocation.
This pilot RCT for ARHL and late-life depression was feasible to execute and showed clinical promise, but improved methods of blinding the experimental treatments are needed. Larger studies should investigate whether hearing remediation may be an effective preventative and/or therapeutic strategy for late-life depression and cognitive decline.
年龄相关性听力损失(ARHL)是一种普遍存在的病症,与抑郁和认知能力下降的风险增加有关。这项为期 12 周的前瞻性、双盲、随机对照试验(RCT)评估了一种新型研究设计的可行性,旨在研究针对伴有 ARHL 的老年抑郁症患者使用助听器(HA)的效果。
方法/设计:共有 13 名年龄在 60 岁以上的个体参与研究,他们被诊断为患有重性抑郁障碍或持续性抑郁障碍,且至少存在轻度听力损失(纯音平均听力≥30dB)。这些参与者被随机分为两组,分别接受全(主动)增益和低增益(假)HA 治疗,并在接受常规精神科治疗的基础上进行 HA 治疗。主要的评估指标是 HA 使用时长(每日时长)、不良反应发生频率、退出率以及研究盲法的维持情况。
HA 的使用依从性非常好(两组每日使用时长均超过 9 小时),且两组间不良反应发生频率和退出率无显著差异。初步数据表明,在听力功能(老年人听力障碍问卷[非参数效应大小(np-ES)=0.62])、抑郁症状(抑郁症状清单[np-ES=0.31])、认知功能(神经心理状态评估重复电池即时记忆[np-ES=0.25])和一般功能(世界卫生组织残疾评定量表[np-ES=0.53])方面,主动增益 HA 治疗组较假增益 HA 治疗组均有显著改善。两组中均有超过 50%的参与者正确猜测了自己的治疗分组,表明实验治疗的盲法不完全。
本项针对 ARHL 和老年期抑郁症的 RCT 研究是可行的,具有临床应用前景,但需要改进实验治疗的盲法方法。未来应开展更大规模的研究,以探讨听力矫正是否可以作为一种预防和/或治疗老年期抑郁症和认知能力下降的有效策略。