Department of Otolaryngology, Hannover Medical School, Carl-Neuberg-Str. 1, 30625, Hannover, Germany.
Cluster of Excellence Hearing4all, Oldenburg, Germany.
Trials. 2020 Jul 14;21(1):643. doi: 10.1186/s13063-020-04522-9.
The standard therapy for patients suffering from sensorineural hearing loss is cochlear implantation. The insertion of the electrode array into the cochlea, with potential mechanical trauma and the presence of this foreign body inside the cochlea, may lead to free radical formation and reduced blood perfusion of the cochlea which can result in a loss of residual hearing. Studies have suggested that a particular combination of the antioxidants vitamins A, C and E as well as the vasodilator magnesium (together: ACEMg) may protect the residual hearing.
The potential protective effect of ACEMg on residual hearing preservation in cochlear implant (CI) patients was investigated in a single-centre, randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind phase II clinical trial. CI candidates with some residual hearing in low frequencies receiving MED-EL implants of different FLEX electrode array lengths were treated with ACEMg tablets or placebo respectively 2 days preoperatively and up to 3 months postoperatively. The study objective was to demonstrate that ACEMg is more efficacious than placebo in preserving residual hearing during cochlear implantation by comparing the hearing loss (change in hearing thresholds at 500 Hz from baseline) 3 months after the first fitting between the two treatment groups and to investigate the treatments' safety.
Fifty-one patients were included in the study, which had to be terminated before the recruitment goal was reached because of IMP-resupply mismanagement of one partner. In the intention-to-treat population, 25 patients were treated with ACEMg and 24 patients with placebo. The mean hearing loss at 500 Hz was (± 15.84) 30.21 dB (placebo) or (± 17.56) 26.00 dB (ACEMg) 3 months after the initial fitting. Adjusting the postoperative hearing loss for the baseline residual hearing, planned electrode length and surgeon results in 8.01 dB reduced hearing loss in ACEMg-treated patients compared to placebo-treated ones. The safety analysis revealed that ACEMg was generally well-tolerated with adverse event frequencies below the placebo level.
This is the first clinical trial investigating a drug effect on residual hearing in CI patients. These first-in-man data may suggest that a perioperative oral administration of ACEMg is safe and may provide protection of residual hearing in CI patients.
EU Clinical Trial Register No. 2012-005002-22 . Registered on 6 December 2013.
European Commission FP7-HEALTH-2012-INNOVATION-2.
对于患有感音神经性听力损失的患者,标准疗法是进行耳蜗植入。将电极阵列插入耳蜗可能会导致机械创伤和异物的存在,从而导致自由基的形成和耳蜗的血液灌注减少,这可能导致残余听力的丧失。研究表明,抗氧化剂维生素 A、C 和 E 以及血管扩张剂镁的特定组合(简称:ACEMg)可能具有保护残余听力的作用。
在一项单中心、随机、安慰剂对照、双盲 II 期临床试验中,研究了 ACEMg 对耳蜗植入(CI)患者残余听力保护的潜在作用。接受不同长度 MED-EL FLEX 电极阵列的 CI 候选者在术前 2 天和术后 3 个月内接受 ACEMg 片剂或安慰剂治疗。研究目的是通过比较两组患者在首次佩戴后的 3 个月时 500Hz 的听力损失(与基线相比的听力阈值变化),证明 ACEMg 比安慰剂更能有效地在耳蜗植入过程中保护残余听力,并研究治疗的安全性。
51 名患者入组了该研究,但由于合作伙伴的 IMP 供应管理失误,在达到招募目标之前,该研究不得不提前终止。在意向治疗人群中,25 名患者接受 ACEMg 治疗,24 名患者接受安慰剂治疗。首次佩戴后 3 个月时,500Hz 的平均听力损失为(±15.84)30.21dB(安慰剂)或(±17.56)26.00dB(ACEMg)。调整术后听力损失、基线残余听力、计划电极长度和外科医生的结果后,ACEMg 治疗组的听力损失比安慰剂治疗组降低了 8.01dB。安全性分析表明,ACEMg 总体上耐受性良好,不良事件发生率低于安慰剂水平。
这是第一项研究耳蜗植入患者中药物对残余听力影响的临床试验。这些首次人体数据可能表明,围手术期口服 ACEMg 是安全的,可能为 CI 患者提供残余听力保护。
欧盟临床试验注册中心编号 2012-005002-22。注册于 2013 年 12 月 6 日。
欧盟委员会 FP7-健康-2012-创新-2。