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Effects of Endolymphatic Sac Drainage With Steroids for Meniere's Disease (EDSS)

O

Osaka University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Meniere's Disease

Treatments

Procedure: endolymphatic sac drainage with steroids

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT00500474
tk19661217
tk20090401

Details and patient eligibility

About

Meniere's disease is a common inner ear disease with an incidence of 15-50 per 100,000 population. Since Meniere's disease is thought to be triggered by an immune insult to inner ear, we examined intra-endolymphatic sac application of large doses of steroids as de novo treatment for intractable Meniere's disease.

Full description

Meniere's disease characterized by recurrent attacks of vertigo, fluctuating hearing loss and tinnitus, is a common disease with an incidence of 15-50 per 100,000 population. Some patients with Meniere's disease are strongly prevented from participating in activities of daily life and interaction with their social environment, such as work and schooling, due to frequent attacks of vertigo especially with progressive sensorineural hearing loss, in spite of various kinds of medication. This type of Meniere's disease is called intractable Meniere's disease. Although the oto-pathology in Meniere's temporal bones was revealed in 1938 to be inner ear endolymphatic hydrops, the definitive pathogenesis of Meniere's disease is still unknown and there is no radical treatment for this disease.

It has, however, been reported that Meniere's disease is usually triggered by immune, metabolic, infectious, traumatic or other insults to the inner ear, associated with a small misplaced malfunctioning endolymphatic sac. Among these insults, immune-mediated responses in the inner ear endo-organs such as the endolymphatic sac, stria vascularis and spiral ligament, are thought to be the main reason for the development of symptoms in Meniere's disease. Thus, systemic administration and/or local perfusion of corticosteroids into the middle ear have been adopted as an anti-immune or anti-inflammatory therapy for patients with intractable Meniere's disease. These treatments were reported to result in good relief from vertigo and improvement of hearing in some cases. However, these results especially for hearing did not last long enough to discontinue additional repetitive applications of steroids. Since Meniere's disease is characterized by repeated attacks of vertigo with fluctuating and/or progressive hearing loss unlike other inner ear diseases without recurrence such as sudden deafness and vestibular neuritis, it is necessary to refrain from repetitive applications of steroids for the long-term follow-up with Meniere's patients because of side effects.

For inner ear drug delivery, we noted another hopeful but unevaluated route, the longitudinal route from the endolymphatic sac to the cochlea and vestibule, suggested by several lines of evidence in animal studies. Morgenstern et al. and Lee et al. demonstrated that the intra-endolymphatic sac materials could reach the cochlear endolymphatic site through the vestibular aqueduct using a test marker and an oto-toxic drug, respectively. Recently, Yamasoba et al. suggested the possibility of gene therapy through the vestibular aqueduct route. We also revealed that intra-endolymphatic sac steroids could up-regulate a water channel molecule, aquaporin-3 mRNA in the cochlea.

In the present study, we examined the intra-endolymphatic sac application of large doses of steroids as de novo treatment for intractable Meniere's disease.

Enrollment

197 patients

Sex

All

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Clinical diagnosis of Meniere's Disease, who did not respond to various forms of medical and psychological managements for at least 6 months, i.e. intractable Meniere's disease.

Exclusion criteria

  • Other known causes of vertigo including central lesion

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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