Qualifying Cochlear Implant Candidates-Does it Matter How Patients Are Qualified?

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Tác giả: Craig A Buchman, Nedim Durakovic, Jacques A Herzog, David S Lee, Amanda J Ortmann, Cole Pavelchek, Matthew A Shew, Miriam R Smetak, Amit Walia, Cameron C Wick

Ngôn ngữ: eng

Ký hiệu phân loại: 153.123 Recall and reproduction

Thông tin xuất bản: United States : Otology & neurotology : official publication of the American Otological Society, American Neurotology Society [and] European Academy of Otology and Neurotology , 2025

Mô tả vật lý:

Bộ sưu tập: NCBI

ID: 199220

 OBJECTIVE: Evaluate variable qualification criteria for cochlear implant (CI) recipients and 12-month speech perception outcomes. STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective cohort study. SETTING: HERMES national database and nonoverlapping single-institution CI database. PATIENTS: A total of 2,124 adult unilateral CI recipients categorized by qualifying status: AzBio in quiet (n = 1,239), +10 dB SNR (but not in quiet
  n = 519), +5 dB SNR (but not in quiet or +10 dB SNR
  n = 366)
  CNC ≤40% (n = 1,037), CNC 41% to 50% (n = 31), and CNC 51% to 60% (n = 20). INTERVENTIONS: CI. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Pre- and 12-month postoperative speech perception performance. Clinically significant improvement was defined as ≥15% gain. RESULTS: Quiet qualifiers experienced improvement in all listening conditions, whereas +10 dB SNR and +5 dB SNR qualifiers only improved in their qualifying condition and implanted ear CNC. When stratified by expanded Medicare criteria (binaural AzBio ≤60% correct), patients that qualified in quiet experienced improvements regardless of qualifying threshold or background noise. However, those that qualified in noise and AzBio ≤60% experienced mixed results in quiet and limited gain in background noise. When ≤60% criteria was applied to CNC of the worse ear, ≤40% qualifiers experienced large improvements in all tested conditions, but those who qualified by 41% to 50% or 51% to 60% only demonstrated modest improvements in AzBio sentence testing. CONCLUSIONS: Quiet qualifiers improved in all testing conditions, while those qualifying in noise improved in their qualifying condition. Patients who qualified by expanded Medicare criteria (≤60%) showed improvement when qualifying with AzBio in quiet, but should be used with caution when qualifying patients in background noise or CNC due to more limited gains in performance.
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