Pilot Clinical Study Using Pre-operative Simulation for Patients Undergoing Cochlear Implant

NCT ID: NCT04588870

Last Updated: 2024-02-07

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

Get a concise snapshot of the trial, including recruitment status, study phase, enrollment targets, and key timeline milestones.

Recruitment Status

WITHDRAWN

Clinical Phase

NA

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2024-02-29

Study Completion Date

2026-03-31

Brief Summary

Review the sponsor-provided synopsis that highlights what the study is about and why it is being conducted.

36 patients will be enrolled in a pilot trial. Eligible patients (receiving CI at OSU) that consent to participate into the study will be enrolled. A simulation with visualize cochlear substructures will be created for each patient, and surgeon will conduct virtual surgery with various cochlear implant electrode types and using different techniques for optimal positioning. Based on the feedback from the simulation platform, the surgeon will find the optimal CI electrode and surgical technique using the virtual simulation and a formal plan will be recorded to guide the actual surgery. Patient demographic information, medical history and pre op audiogram will be collected once enrolled. Post-op images will be used to identify the actual electrode location (scalar location (SL), modiolar distance (MD) and and angular insertion depth (AID). At 6- and 12-months post-op, word score (CNC) will be obtained as primary clinical outcomes and AZBio scores will also be obtained and evaluated as a secondary clinical outcome. All outcomes data to be collected for SA3 are considered as part of routine clinical care for patients undergoing CI at our institution. The prospective data collection plan will ensure these data will be collected timely with high quality. OSU IRB approval has been obtained for this study (OSU IRB# 2020H0080: Virtual Reality simulation for patient specific surgical rehearsal in cochlear implantation - OSU#2) pending additional amendments as needed.

Detailed Description

Dive into the extended narrative that explains the scientific background, objectives, and procedures in greater depth.

Hypothesis: Patients undergoing pre-operative CI simulation will have improved outcomes as measured by SL, MD and audiological outcomes.

The goal of this aim is to demonstrate clinical feasibility and to collect preliminary efficacy data for using the pre-operative simulation with active feedback for CI patients. This will be achieved by prospectively using the CI simulation system and evaluating both technical and clinical audiological outcomes.

C.4.1 Pre-operative Simulation: Prior to surgery, a simulation with visualization of cochlear microstructures will be created for each patient, and the surgeon will conduct iterative virtual surgery with active feedback to determine the optimal surgical approach and cochlear implant electrode position. Based on the feedback from the simulation platform, the surgeon will determine the optimal CI electrode and surgical technique using the virtual simulation to plan the actual surgery. Post-implant feedback will be displayed to the surgeon. Once parameters (SL, MD, AID) are optimized, a surgical plan will be recorded and used during the actual surgical procedure. A surgical plan will consist of the implant type, cochleostomy site, and insertion techniques used for optimal placement. This will be added to the patient electronic medical record to be referenced immediately prior to surgery. Additionally, the simulator will save all performances with the optimized performance being made available for review on the simulator at any time (3-dimensional playback).

C.4.2 Clinical Outcomes: Aided speech perception testing in the CI ear will be administered at 6- and 12-months post activation using monosyllabic words (CNC Word test) presented at 60 dB SPL (A-weighted) as well as sentences (AzBio) in quiet and at +10 signal-to-noise ratio. Percent correct will be calculated for each test and will serve as the primary clinical outcomes.

C.4.3 User Evaluation: Simulator evaluation (user interface, usefulness, potential usage in future, and overall satisfactory) and feedback/comments from the surgeon about the simulation platform will continued to be collected pre and post-operatively to provide insight into continued future improvement of the simulation platform.

C.4.5 Reproducibility and Rigor:

Statistical Analysis: Demographic information as well as post-op CI location parameters (SL, MD, AID), pre/post-op CNC and AzBio scores will be summarized with descriptive statistics: mean/SD, median/IQR for continuous variables and count/percentage for categorical data. Changes of the CNC /AzBio scores overtime will be analyzed using linear mixed models to account for the association of measures from the same patient at different time points, and to deal with missing data assuming missing data will occur randomly. Exploratory analysis will be conducted to (1) evaluate the association of the CI location parameters with the post-op CNC scores; (2) compare the post-op CI location parameters with the CI patients without pre-op simulations that are reported in the literature and/or those who have undergone CI insertion in this institution (historical controls at OSU).

Sample Size: For this pilot study, a sample size of 30 patients is proposed to evaluate selected feasibility issues, assess the adequacy of instrumentation, and collect preliminary efficacy data (along with historical data) for the design of a larger prospective, randomized trial. For the improvement of the clinical outcome (CNC) after CI, a sample size of 30 patients produces a one-sided 90% upper confidence limit of variance \<1.5 when the sample variance of the improvement of CNC is 1.0. Up to 36 patients will be enrolled to account for potential attrition due to various unexpected reasons during the period from the enrollment to implant surgery, to 6-month follow-up.

Conditions

See the medical conditions and disease areas that this research is targeting or investigating.

Sensori-Neural Deafness

Study Design

Understand how the trial is structured, including allocation methods, masking strategies, primary purpose, and other design elements.

Allocation Method

NA

Intervention Model

SINGLE_GROUP

Primary Study Purpose

DEVICE_FEASIBILITY

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

Review each arm or cohort in the study, along with the interventions and objectives associated with them.

Preoperative Cochlear Implant

The intervention will be the use of a surgical simulation system preoperatively by the surgeon to develop the surgical plan to optimize electrode array placement with respect to scalar location and modiolar distance.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Pre operative computer based cochlear implant surgical simulation

Intervention Type DEVICE

Prior to surgery, the surgeon will perform virtual cochlear implant surgery on patient specific imaging data within a computer simulation program. The surgeon will be able to iterate the procedure on the simulator until achieving the best electrode array location is achieved with respect to scalar location and modiolar distance. A written and graphical surgical plan will then be developed that the surgeon can use in the actual surgery.

Interventions

Learn about the drugs, procedures, or behavioral strategies being tested and how they are applied within this trial.

Pre operative computer based cochlear implant surgical simulation

Prior to surgery, the surgeon will perform virtual cochlear implant surgery on patient specific imaging data within a computer simulation program. The surgeon will be able to iterate the procedure on the simulator until achieving the best electrode array location is achieved with respect to scalar location and modiolar distance. A written and graphical surgical plan will then be developed that the surgeon can use in the actual surgery.

Intervention Type DEVICE

Eligibility Criteria

Check the participation requirements, including inclusion and exclusion rules, age limits, and whether healthy volunteers are accepted.

Inclusion Criteria

* Sensorineural Deafness
* Candidate for cochlear implantation

Exclusion Criteria

* Inability to participate
* Not a candidate for cochlear implantation
* Age less than 18 or greater than 90
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Maximum Eligible Age

90 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

Meet the organizations funding or collaborating on the study and learn about their roles.

Ohio State University

OTHER

Sponsor Role collaborator

Region Capital Denmark

OTHER

Sponsor Role collaborator

Nationwide Children's Hospital

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

Identify the individual or organization who holds primary responsibility for the study information submitted to regulators.

Gregory Wiet

Professor of Otolaryngology, Pediatrics and Biomedical Informatics

Responsibility Role PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Other Identifiers

Review additional registry numbers or institutional identifiers associated with this trial.

OSU2020H0080

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

More Related Trials

Additional clinical trials that may be relevant based on similarity analysis.

Cochlear Implantation Experience
NCT06896864 NOT_YET_RECRUITING