Abstract
Objective
Hearing loss is a significant and growing problem as patients with cystic fibrosis (CF) live longer and experience frequent courses of intravenous aminoglycoside antibiotics (hereafter, “IVs”). This study seeks to document that risk in a large adult population with CF, accounting for age and aminoglycoside exposure.
Study Design
Retrospective case review of patients with CF who had multiple audiograms over years.
Setting
Tertiary care cystic fibrosis setting.
Subject and Methods
The first and last audiograms recorded over a 10-year period were compared for 165 adult patients with CF. Patients were divided into 3 study groups: 34 patients with no intervening aminoglycoside IVs (0 IVs), 103 patients with 1 to 9 IVs, and 28 patients with ≥10 IVs. Threshold shift (TS) between the audiograms were examined for the 3 groups before and after age/sex adjustments. Two new hearing loss metrics were tested.
Results
At first examination, 48% of patients (average age, 30.0 years) already had hearing loss. At last examination (average, 4.4 years later), 64% of the patients had hearing loss even with age/sex adjustment. Use of the age/sex hearing threshold adjustment eliminated the TS in the 0 IVs group. Two new metrics calculated for each patient demonstrated that 48% of patients who had 1 to 9 IVs had ototoxic scores, while almost 80% of the ≥10 IV group had ototoxic scores.
Conclusion
The majority of adult patients with CF are (often repeatedly) exposed to parenteral aminoglycosides and lose hearing at a rate that far exceeds that predicted from aging alone.
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