Long-term hearing loss after chemoradiation in patients with head and neck cancer

Authors
  • E.A.R. Theunissen
  • C.L. Zuur
  • S.C.J. Bosma
  • M. Lopez-Yurda
Publication date 2014
Journal The Laryngoscope
Volume | Issue number 124 | 12
Pages (from-to) 2720-2725
Organisations
  • Faculty of Dentistry (ACTA)
  • Faculty of Medicine (AMC-UvA)
Abstract
Objectives/Hypothesis
The purpose of this study was to determine whether concomitant chemoradiation (CCRT)-induced hearing loss is progressive over time or not.

Study Design
Long-term (LT) follow-up study.

Methods
Between 1999 and 2004, 158 patients with head and neck cancer were treated with intravenous (IV) CCRT (n = 80) or intraarterial CCRT (n = 78). Audiometry was performed before, short-term (ST), and LT posttreatment. Differences in hearing were assessed with a multivariable linear regression analysis, incorporating the effect of aging.

Results
Long-term audiometry (median 4.5 years) was available in 67 patients (42%). At ST follow-up, a deterioration of 21.6 decibel was seen compared to baseline at pure-tone averages (PTA) 8-10-12.5 kHz. At LT follow-up, this deterioration further increased with 5 decibel (P = 0.005). Only in CCRT-IV patients was a significant progressive treatment-induced hearing loss seen, at PTA 8-10-12.5 kHz (P = 0.005), PTA 1-2-4 kHz air conduction (P = 0.014), and PTA 0.5-1-2 kHz bone conduction (P = 0.045).

Conclusion
CCRT-induced hearing impairment was progressive over time, especially in higher frequencies and only in CCRT-IV patients, with a modest deterioration of 5 decibel 4.5 years post-treatment.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1002/lary.24802
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