Liao Elizabeth N, Singh Amritpal, Jaradeh Katrin, Ho Melissa, Stephans Jihyun, Anand Payal, Chan Dylan K
J Am Acad Audiol. 2025 Jun 19. doi: 10.3766/jaaa.240031.
Hearing loss is the most common sensory disorder in children, affecting 0.1 percent of newborns. The auditory brainstem response (ABR) test is the gold standard diagnostic test for infants who are unable to participate in behavioral testing. ABR is preferably performed under natural sleep (NS-ABR) to avoid risks associated with general anesthesia and sedation. However, if the infant wakes up during an NS-ABR, the test must be stopped and may need to be repeated later. Delays in diagnosis can place the child at higher risk for delays in cognitive and educational development. We sought to understand factors that contribute to successful NS-ABR. This was an exploratory mixed methods study to understand the barriers in obtaining an NS-ABR that is clinically sufficient for management. We performed a retrospective review of 0- to 12-month-old children who underwent NS-ABR. For the quantitative approach, we studied 86 consecutive infants of 0–12 months of age who underwent NS-ABR. For qualitative analysis, semistructured interviews and focus groups with audiologists were performed and analyzed using a thematic analysis approach. Among the cohort of 86 infants, 164 NS-ABRs were performed. Sixty-three (73 percent) patients obtained a successful NS-ABR; only 65 (40 percent) of NS-ABRs were successful. The most common reasons for unsuccessful NS-ABR were poor sleep quality (n = 60/99, 61 percent), needing to “expand and confirm findings” (n = 26, 26 percent), and lack of or nonadherence to patient instructions (n = 27, 27 percent). Previous NS-ABR attempts and auditory steady-state response (ASSR) were significantly associated with successful NS-ABR (odds ratio [OR] = 1.46, 90 percent confidence interval [CI] = 1.13–2.05; OR = 4.65, 90 percent CI = 1.70–12.73, respectively). We identified four themes that impact success: inadequate logistical support for providers, inadequate emotional support for providers, providers juggling multiple tasks, and inadequate system scheduling flexibility. We triangulated these results to model interactions between factors that contribute to successful NS-ABR. NS-ABR is a diagnostic tool that can decrease patient exposure to sedation and anesthesia. This study suggests that individual, caregiver, provider, and systemic factors impact the success of NS-ABRs, especially for underserved populations. Multilevel interventions to improve success rates of NS-ABR would help decrease time from screening to diagnosis.
听力损失是儿童中最常见的感觉障碍,影响0.1%的新生儿。听觉脑干反应(ABR)测试是无法参与行为测试的婴儿的金标准诊断测试。ABR最好在自然睡眠(NS-ABR)状态下进行,以避免与全身麻醉和镇静相关的风险。然而,如果婴儿在NS-ABR测试过程中醒来,测试必须停止,可能稍后需要重复进行。诊断延迟会使儿童面临认知和教育发展延迟的更高风险。我们试图了解有助于成功进行NS-ABR的因素。这是一项探索性混合方法研究,旨在了解在获得临床上足以用于管理的NS-ABR方面存在的障碍。我们对接受NS-ABR的0至12个月大儿童进行了回顾性研究。对于定量方法,我们研究了86名连续的0至12个月大接受NS-ABR的婴儿。对于定性分析,我们对听力学家进行了半结构化访谈和焦点小组讨论,并采用主题分析方法进行分析。在86名婴儿队列中进行了164次NS-ABR测试。63名(73%)患者成功完成了NS-ABR测试;只有65次(40%)NS-ABR测试成功。NS-ABR测试不成功的最常见原因是睡眠质量差(n = 60/99,61%)、需要“扩展并确认结果”(n = 26,26%)以及缺乏或未遵守患者指导(n = 27,27%)。之前的NS-ABR测试尝试和听觉稳态反应(ASSR)与成功的NS-ABR显著相关(优势比[OR] = 1.46,90%置信区间[CI] = 1.13至2.05;OR = 4.65,90%CI = 1.70至12.73)。我们确定了影响成功的四个主题:对提供者的后勤支持不足、对提供者的情感支持不足、提供者兼顾多项任务以及系统调度灵活性不足。我们对这些结果进行了三角测量,以模拟有助于成功进行NS-ABR的因素之间的相互作用。NS-ABR是一种可以减少患者接受镇静和麻醉的诊断工具。这项研究表明,个体、照顾者、提供者和系统因素会影响NS-ABR测试的成功,尤其是对于服务不足的人群。提高NS-ABR成功率的多层面干预措施将有助于减少从筛查到诊断的时间。