Immunity After Cochlear Implantation and Perilymph Molecular Profiles in Sensorineural Hearing Loss

NCT ID: NCT05670158

Last Updated: 2024-01-18

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

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Recruitment Status

RECRUITING

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

80 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2023-12-07

Study Completion Date

2027-03-31

Brief Summary

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Many patients receiving cochlear implant (CI) have some residual hearing prior to implantation surgery. However, approximately one third of them will lose it in next 6 months after cochlear implantation. Although the mechanisms involved in the residual audition loss remain unknown, animal experiments suggest the role of inflammatory or immune reaction in the cochlea. The goal of this project is to search in the perilymph (a fluid which fills the scala vestibuli and scala tympani of the cochlea) some predictive biomarkers of the residual hearing loss using modern proteomics and immunological techniques. A parallel search for blood biomarkers of post-implantation residual hearing loss and for molecular and cellular evidences of immune response to cochlear implantation will be performed.

The study will recruit 50 subjects-candidates for cochlear implantation surgery; 30 normally hearing individuals eligible for other types of otological interventions will form a control group. For all the participants blood samples will be collected and preserved. In addition, the perilymph sampling will be performed during cochlear implantation surgery.

This project relies on the calculation that from 50 patients post-cochlear implantation, 15 patients will form a group with maintained residual hearing and 15 will display delayed hearing loss. For these 30 subjects together with the control group the blood biomarkers search will be performed.

For the group of implanted patients, the follow-up will last for 12 months with 6 visits in total :

* the inclusion visit V0 during which the study will be presented and the consent form will be signed
* the surgery visit V1 with blood sample and perilymph collection
* the activation visit V2, 1 month ± 1 week after V1, visit V3 3 months ± 7 days after V1, V4 6 months ± 7 days after V1, V5 12 months ± 1 month after V1. During each of this visit blood sampling will be performed.

For the control group, the follow up will be 6 months long with 4 visits in total arranged during the routine follow-up appointments:

* the inclusion visit V0 during which the study will be presented and the consent form will be signed
* the surgery visit V1, the 1 month visit V2 and the 6 months visit V3 during which the blood sampling will be performed.

Detailed Description

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With the progress of technologies and surgical methods, cochlear implantation, initially proposed only to patients with completely non-functional inner ear, can be now performed on individuals with still some measurable hearing left in some frequencies. Such patients can additionally benefit from a special treatment by electric-acoustic stimulation (EAS). Combining the electric stimulation with cochlear implant (CI) and acoustic amplification of residual hearing using a conventional hearing aid (HA) can drastically improve one's quality of life and ameliorate the performance in noisy environment as well as music perception.

Since the main condition for EAS is the residual hearing preservation, it is important to understand the reasons of its loss post-cochlear implantation. This loss can occur in 2 periods:

* Early after surgery (˂ 1 month): mainly due to the trauma from electrode insertion. This risk decreases with the development of surgical techniques. Another possible reason is early inflammation processes in the cochleae.
* Later after surgery (˃ 1 month): occurs mainly about 3 months post-implantation in 30-40 % of patients. This loss is the main reason for dropping out the EAS leaving the patient to rely on CI only.

Animal studies suggest that the delayed residual hearing loss might happen as consequence of cochlear fibrosis development, supposedly due to the inflammation and foreign body response to the CI materials within the cochlea. In its natural state, the cochlea does not contain any immune cells and is well protected from immune stimulation by infectious agents. Cochlear implantation, however, provides a single clinical cause for infectious or autoimmune fibrosis. Such immune response might be provoked by autoantigens against cochlear proteins like Cochline or TectB. This study aims to search blood markers of immunisation against inner ear proteins after cochlear implantation. Another goal is to seek potential biomarkers of delayed residual hearing loss directly in perilymph. Proteomic analysis will be performed using Liquid Chromatography - High Resolution Mass Spectroscopy (HRMS) technique.

The main objective of this study is

* to identify, in the perilymph of implanted patients, biomarkers predictive of the delayed residual hearing loss
* to identify blood biomarkers predictive of delayed residual hearing loss in implanted patients

The secondary objectives are

* to describe qualitatively and quantitatively the time evolution for blood biomarkers of interest after cochlear implantation
* to correlate quantitative values of identified biomarkers with clinical data of implanted patients
* to identify perilymph and blood biomarkers of early residual hearing loss post-cochlear implantation
* depending on molecular profiles identified, to study metabolic pathways and mechanisms involved in delayed residual hearing loss post-cochlear implantation
* to seek for blood indicators in favour of anti-cochlear immunisation through screening for peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC)
* to create a bio collection of human perilymph and blood serum biobank of cochlear implants users for future proteomics/molecular studies

Conditions

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Sensorineural Hearing Loss

Study Design

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Allocation Method

NON_RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

The study will recruit individuals eligible for cochlear implantation surgery. In parallel, the control group will be formed from normal hearing patients - candidates for other otological interventions. The two groups will be matched by age and gender of participants.
Primary Study Purpose

OTHER

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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"Cochlear Implantation" group

50 patients with sensorineural hearing loss eligible for cochlear implantation surgery. The blood and perilymph sampling will be performed during surgery (visit V1). The blood sampling will be additionally done during the visits V2, V3 and V4. After the visit V4, this arm will be subdivided into 2 groups: group 1, 15 patients with the delayed residual hearing loss, and group 2,15 patients with preserved residual hearing. For these 30 patients, blood sampling will be also performed during the visit V5.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Blood sampling

Intervention Type BIOLOGICAL

Blood will be collected into 2 EDTA and 1 heparin tube. The 2 EDTA tubes (4ml of blood in each) will be transported on ice to the proteomics platform in the next three hours, centrifuged and stored on -80 degrees Celcius in low-binding tubes for further molecular analysis. 1 heparin tube (5mL) will be sent to the Bacteriology-Virology Department for the active PBMC counting.

Perilymph sampling

Intervention Type PROCEDURE

The perilymph collection will be performed during the cochlear implantation surgery at the same time as the round window opening. 5 to 15 microliters will be aspirated using an atraumatic spinal needle mounted onto 1 ml insulin syringe.

Control group

30 normally hearing patients who will undergo through an otological surgery other than cochlear implantation. A blood sampling will be performed during surgery (visit V1) as well as during the visits V2 and V3.

Group Type OTHER

Blood sampling

Intervention Type BIOLOGICAL

Blood will be collected into 2 EDTA and 1 heparin tube. The 2 EDTA tubes (4ml of blood in each) will be transported on ice to the proteomics platform in the next three hours, centrifuged and stored on -80 degrees Celcius in low-binding tubes for further molecular analysis. 1 heparin tube (5mL) will be sent to the Bacteriology-Virology Department for the active PBMC counting.

Interventions

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Blood sampling

Blood will be collected into 2 EDTA and 1 heparin tube. The 2 EDTA tubes (4ml of blood in each) will be transported on ice to the proteomics platform in the next three hours, centrifuged and stored on -80 degrees Celcius in low-binding tubes for further molecular analysis. 1 heparin tube (5mL) will be sent to the Bacteriology-Virology Department for the active PBMC counting.

Intervention Type BIOLOGICAL

Perilymph sampling

The perilymph collection will be performed during the cochlear implantation surgery at the same time as the round window opening. 5 to 15 microliters will be aspirated using an atraumatic spinal needle mounted onto 1 ml insulin syringe.

Intervention Type PROCEDURE

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Patients aged 18 years or more
* Indication for the cochlear implantation surgery according to the criteria of French National Authority for Health (Severe to profound sensorineural deafness with indication for cochlear implant surgery: Intelligibility less than or equal to 50% when performing vocal audiometry tests with Fournier's list in free field with recent devices.)
* Presence of "useful" residual hearing ≤ 80 dB on at least 2 consecutive frequencies (in air conduction) from the range 125, 250, 500, 1000 kHz on pure-tone audiometry
* Patients given their free and informed written consent
* Patients affiliated to a French social security system


* Patients aged 18 years or more
* Indication for otological surgery of the middle ear (excluding active infectious or inflammatory pathology e.g. myringoplasty, ossiculoplasty, cure for otosclerosis)
* Normal hearing (non affected inner ear): average hearing loss (mean threshold for the frequencies 500, 1000, 2000, 4000 Hz) ≤ 35 dB in bone conduction
* Patients given their free and informed written consent
* Patients affiliated to a French social security system

Exclusion Criteria

* Contraindication to surgery detected during the preoperative assessment
* Pre-implantation cochlear assessment unfavorable to the implantation surgery
* Absence of residual hearing shown by preoperative audiometry
* History of bacterial labyrinthitis or bacterial meningitis
* Cochlear ossification shown on preoperative imaging
* Homozygous pathogenic mutations identified by molecular diagnosis of the SCL26A5 (prestin), TECTB (Beta-Tectorin) genes, and heterozygous of the COCH gene (Cochlin) prior to implantation (if available)
* Vulnerable subject: minors, protected adults as defined by the Public Health Code, pregnant or breastfeeding women, subject under guardianship or subject deprived of liberty
* Participation in another pharmacological therapeutic interventional clinical research


* Contraindication to surgery detected during the preoperative assessment
* Fluctuating hearing = fluctuating hearing thresholds on at least one ear (shown by past bone conduction pure-tone audiometries)
* History of bacterial labyrinthitis or bacterial meningitis
* Middle ear infection or inflammation on the day of the surgery
* Chronical immune or inflammatory disease
* Active viral or bacterial infection on the day of inclusion visit or surgery
* Fever on the day of the first blood sample
* Vulnerable subject: minors, protected adults as defined by the Public Health Code, pregnant or breastfeeding women, subject under guardianship or subject deprived of liberty
* Participation in another pharmacological therapeutic interventional clinical research
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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University Hospital, Montpellier

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Responsibility Role SPONSOR

Locations

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UH Montpellier

Montpellier, , France

Site Status RECRUITING

Countries

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France

Central Contacts

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Akil Kaderbay, MD

Role: CONTACT

+33467336890

Frédéric Venail, PhD, MD

Role: CONTACT

+33467336890

Facility Contacts

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Akil KARDEBAY, MD

Role: primary

+33467336890

Other Identifiers

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RECHMPL21_0380

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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