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Multicenter clinical trial of the Nucleus Hybrid S8 cochlear implant: Final outcomes
Author(s) -
Gantz Bruce J.,
Dunn Camille,
Oleson Jacob,
Hansen Marlan,
Parkinson Aaron,
Turner Christopher
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
the laryngoscope
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.181
H-Index - 148
eISSN - 1531-4995
pISSN - 0023-852X
DOI - 10.1002/lary.25572
Subject(s) - audiology , cochlear implant , speech perception , hearing aid , medicine , consonant , multicenter study , hearing loss , psychology , perception , speech recognition , randomized controlled trial , surgery , vowel , computer science , neuroscience
Objectives/Hypothesis The concept of expanding electrical speech processing to those with more residual acoustic hearing with a less‐invasive shorter cochlear implant (CI) has been ongoing since 1999. A multicenter study of the Nucleus Hybrid S8 CI took place between 2002 and 2011. This report describes the final outcomes of this clinical trial. Study Design Multicenter, longitudinal, single‐subject design. Methods Eighty‐seven subjects received a Nucleus Hybrid S8 CI in their poorer ear. Speech perception in quiet (Consonant‐Nucleus‐Consonant [CNC] words) and in noise (Bamford‐Kowal‐Bench Sentences‐In‐Noise [BKB‐SIN]) were collected pre‐ and postoperatively at 3, 6, and 12 months. Subjective questionnaire data using the Abbreviated Profile for Hearing Aid Benefit (APHAB) were also collected. Results Some level of hearing preservation was accomplished in 98% subjects, with 90% maintaining a functional low‐frequency pure‐tone average (LFPTA) at initial activation. By 12 months, five subjects had total hearing loss, and 80% of subjects maintained functional hearing. CNC words demonstrated that 82.5% and 87.5% of subjects had significant improvements in the hybrid and combined conditions, respectively. The majority had improvements with BKB‐SIN. Results also indicated that as long as subjects maintained at least a severe LFPTA, there was significant improvement in speech understanding. Furthermore, all subjects reported positive improvements in hearing in three of the four subscales of the APHAB. Conclusions The concept of hybrid speech processing has significant advantages for subjects with residual low‐frequency hearing. In this study, the Nucleus Hybrid S8 provided improved word understanding in quiet and noise. Additionally, there appears to be stability of the residual hearing after initial activation of the device. Level of Evidence 2c Laryngoscope , 126:962–973, 2016

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