1. The molecular etiology of deafness and auditory performance in the postlingually deafened cochlear implantees.
- Author
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Lee SY, Shim YJ, Han JH, Song JJ, Koo JW, Oh SH, Lee S, Oh DY, and Choi BY
- Subjects
- Adult, Cochlea physiopathology, Cochlea surgery, Cochlear Implants, Deafness physiopathology, Female, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Treatment Outcome, Cochlear Implantation, Deafness genetics, Deafness surgery, Speech Perception
- Abstract
Recent advances in molecular genetic testing (MGT) have improved identification of genetic aetiology of candidates for cochlear implantation (CI). However, whether genetic information increases CI outcome predictability in post-lingual deafness remains unclear. Therefore, we evaluated the outcomes of CI with respect to genetic aetiology and clinical predictors by comparing the data of study subjects; those with an identified genetic aetiology (GD group), and those without identifiable variants (GUD group). First, we identified the genetic aetiology in 21 of 40 subjects and also observed genetic etiologic heterogeneity. The GD group demonstrated significantly greater improvement in speech perception scores over a 1-year period than did the GUD group. Further, inverse correlation between deafness duration and the 1-year improvement in speech perception scores was tighter in the GD group than in the GUD group. The weak correlation between deafness duration and CI outcomes in the GUD group might suggest the pathophysiology underlying GUD already significantly involves the cortex, leading to lesser sensitivity to further cortex issues such as deafness duration. Under our MGT protocol, the correlation between deafness duration and CI outcomes were found to rely on the presence of identifiable genetic aetiology, strongly advocating early CI in individual with proven genetic aetiologies.
- Published
- 2020
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