Injection Therapy for Sudden Hearing Loss Disorder May Be
Suitable Alternative to Oral Steroids
May 2011
Treating idiopathic sudden sensorineural hearing loss with injections of
steroids directly into the ear appears to result in recovery of hearing that
is not less than recovery obtained with the standard therapy of oral
corticosteroids and may be a preferable treatment for some patients to avoid
the potential adverse effects of oral steroids, according to a study in the
May 25 issue of JAMA.
Idiopathic (unknown cause) sudden sensorineural (involving the sensory
nerves) hearing loss, a hearing loss with onset in less than 72 hours, has
an estimated incidence between 5 and 20 per 100,000 persons per year,
although this is likely to be an underestimate because many who recover
quickly never seek medical attention. The current standard treatment for
idiopathic hearing loss has been a course of oral corticosteroid (prednisone
or methylprednisolone), according to background information in the article.
In recent years, intratympanic (within the drum of the ear)
corticosteroid treatment by direct injection into the middle ear has gained
wide popularity. One theoretical advantage of intratympanic treatment is an
increased drug concentration in the targeted area, with reduced systemic
steroid exposure and associated systemic adverse effects that may accompany
oral steroids. "However, no adequately powered prospective randomized
controlled trial has compared oral and intratympanic steroid treatments to
demonstrate that increased local drug concentration leads to improved
hearing outcome," the authors write.
Steven D. Rauch, M.D., of Harvard Medical School, Boston, and colleagues
conducted a multicenter, randomized, noninferiority (outcome not worse than
treatment compared to) trial comparing the efficacy of oral prednisone to
intratympanic methylprednisolone for primary treatment of idiopathic hearing
loss. Noninferiority was defined as less than a 10-dB difference in hearing
outcome between treatments. The study included 250 patients with unilateral
sensorineural hearing loss who presented for care within 14 days of onset of
hearing loss of 50 dB or higher of pure tone average hearing threshold. Pure
tone average (PTA) was calculated as the arithmetic average of the hearing
thresholds at 500,1000, 2000, and 4000 Hz in the affected ear. The study was
conducted from December 2004 through October 2009 at 16 academic
community-based otology practices. Participants were followed up for 6
months. One hundred twenty-one patients received 60 mg/d of oral prednisone
for 14 days with a 5-day taper and 129 patients received 4 doses over 14
days of 40 mg/mL of methylprednisolone injected into the middle ear.
The researchers found that improvement in PTA at 2 months in the
intratympanic methylprednisolone group was not inferior to PTA improvement
in the oral prednisone group. "In the oral prednisone group, PTA improved
30.7 dB compared with 28.7 dB in the intratympanic group. Pure tone average
at 2 months averaged 56.0 dB for the oral group and 57.6 dB for the
intratympanic group. The point estimate of the difference between the oral
and intratympanic groups in the [average] change in PTA from baseline to 2
months after randomization is 2.0 dB," the researchers write.
Further comparison of hearing recovery in the oral and intratympanic
treatment groups also showed that the 2 treatments were comparable at 2 and
6 months. The frequency of hearing recovery to normal was 20.7 percent; to
hearing aid range, 66.9 percent in the oral treatment group vs. 24.8 percent
and 62.0 percent in the intratympanic group, respectively.
"Overall, intratympanic methylprednisolone was shown to be not inferior
to oral prednisone for treatment of idiopathic sudden sensorineural hearing
loss. Noninferiority was also indicated for certain subgroups. Both oral and
intratympanic treatments are safe but can cause unpleasant adverse effects.
The comfort, cost, and convenience of oral prednisone are better than
intratympanic treatment. Intratympanic treatment is a suitable alternative
if there are medical contraindications to oral prednisone," the authors
write.
The researchers add that there are a number of hearing loss treatment
questions that remain unanswered by this study. "In future analyses, we hope
to explore our data for possible predictors of treatment outcome. Although
we observed similar efficacy of oral and intratympanic treatments overall,
our subgroup analyses suggested that certain subgroups might achieve greater
benefit from one treatment than the other."
The findings of this study provide a new therapeutic option for patients
with sudden hearing loss for whom oral steroids are contraindicated, writes
Jay F. Piccirillo, M.D., of the Washington University School of Medicine,
St. Louis, in an accompanying editorial.
"The use of intratympanic steroids is moderately uncomfortable,
inconvenient, and more costly than oral steroids and is associated with
several relatively minor adverse effects. Nevertheless, for patients with
sudden hearing loss who are thought to be at too high a risk for systemic
steroid usage, this study suggests a reasonable alternative in the setting
of rapid specialty referral. Additional research should focus on identifying
subgroups of patients for whom steroid treatment seems especially helpful
and whether combination oral and intratympanic is better than single
modality alone. However, the study by Rauch et al did not answer the
lingering question of whether there is any benefit of steroids for the
patient with sudden sensorineural hearing loss. A better understanding of
the pathophysiology of hearing loss, identification of unique prognostic
subgroups, and adherence to rigorous clinical research methods are required
for the proper assessment of the therapeutic benefits of existing treatments
and discovery of new treatments for this disorder."