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Tinnitus Retraining Therapy Trial (TRTT)

Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health logo

Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 3

Conditions

Subjective Tinnitus

Treatments

Behavioral: Standard of Care (SC)
Device: Conventional sound generator (SG)
Behavioral: Directive Counseling (DC)
Device: Placebo sound generator (placebo SG)

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
Other U.S. Federal agency
NIH

Identifiers

NCT01177137
U01DC007422 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)

Details and patient eligibility

About

The primary purpose of the Tinnitus Retraining Therapy Trial (TRTT) is to assess the efficacy of tinnitus retraining therapy (TRT) as a treatment for severe debilitating tinnitus. TRT is a non-medical intervention that uses directive counseling (DC) and sound therapy (ST)to habituate the patient's associated negative emotional reactions to tinnitus, its perception, and ultimately, its impact on the patient's life.

Full description

The Tinnitus Retraining Therapy Trial (TRTT), funded by the National Institute of Deafness and Other Communication Disorders, is a multi-center randomized clinical trial testing the efficacy of tinnitus retraining therapy (TRT) versus standard-of-care (SC) treatment in individuals who have self-perceived intolerable tinnitus. TRT is a non-medical intervention that uses directive counseling (DC) and low-level sound therapy (ST) achieved through sound generators (SGs) to habituate the patient's associated negative emotional reactions (annoyance) to tinnitus, its perception (awareness) and, ultimately, its impact on the participant's life. Study participants will include active and retired military personnel of the U. S. Armed Forces and their dependents who suffer from severe tinnitus. The study will be conducted at flagship Air Force, and Navy Medical Centers.

This trial will evaluate the efficacy of TRT and its components (DC and ST) versus the standard of care (SC) as administered in the military by comparing the efficacy of:

  • (1) TRT (DC and ST achieved using conventional sound generators) versus SC;
  • (2) TRT versus partial TRT (DC and placebo sound generators) to evaluate the separate effect of sound therapy, under the assumption that placebo noise generator will not provide any meaningful sound therapy beyond that found in SC;
  • (3) partial TRT versus SC to evaluate the separate effect of DC.

Eligibility will be determined at the Baseline Eligibility Visit, which will consist of a medical and tinnitus history, physical examination, and baseline audiological/tinnitus/hyperacusis evaluation. Study participants will also complete a series of quality of life and psychological profile tests. Study Audiologists will administer the randomly assigned treatment. Follow-up visits at Clinical Centers will take place at 3, 6, 12, and 18 months and include completion of tinnitus outcome questionnaires at all visits. Psychometric testing and audiological/tinnitus/hyperacusis evaluation will take place at the 6, 12, and 18 month visits. Evaluation of audiometric pure tone and loudness discomfort level also will take place at treatment visits.

The primary outcome to be measured in the TRTT will be change in scores on the Tinnitus Questionnaire (TQ) longitudinally assessed between baseline and follow-up (i.e., at 3, 6, 12 and 18 months following treatment). Secondary outcomes include changes in the sub-scales of the TQ, change in scores from the Tinnitus Handicap Inventory (THI), Tinnitus Functional Index (TFI), Hearing Handicap Inventory (HHI), and TRT visual analogue scales, and change in the Digit Symbol Substitution Test (DSST). Psychometric secondary outcomes also include change in psychoacoustic variables related to the tinnitus sensation, including tinnitus pitch and loudness match, and loudness discomfort level.

The TRTT is designed to have sufficient power to detect a minimal clinically important difference in the Tinnitus Questionnaire (TQ) i.e., a 10 point difference between TRT and SC groups on change in TQ global scores longitudinally assessed over the course of follow-up and a 7-point difference on TQ score by TRT components, DC and ST.

Enrollment

151 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Age 18 years or above
  • Subjective severe tinnitus, defined as a score on the Tinnitus Questionnaire (TQ) greater than or equal to 40
  • Eligible for care at a Department of Defense Clinical Center
  • Speaks English well enough to complete a series of questionnaires and benefit from counseling

Exclusion criteria

  • Involvement in pending tinnitus-related financial claims or litigation except that associated with usual Veterans' Administration retirement claims
  • Tinnitus of less than 12 months duration
  • Treatment for tinnitus within previous 12 months
  • Routine unavoidable exposure to hazardous noise
  • Use of a cancer chemotherapeutic drug within previous 12 months
  • Treatment for head or neck injury within previous 24 months
  • Treatment for an emotional, psychological, or psychiatric condition within previous 12 months resulting in inability to participate in the trial or complete all followup visits, as assessed by best clinical judgment
  • Requirement for use of an ototoxic drug
  • Hearing impairment, defined by audiometric thresholds > 30 dB HL at and below 2,000 Hz and > 40 dB HL at 4,000 and 8,000 Hz
  • Required use of hearing aids
  • Fluctuating hearing loss at a level that would interfere with the reliability of study results
  • One or more prominent spontaneous otoacoustic emissions, defined as the presence of a spontaneous otoacoustic emission spike that is 3 or more times larger than the measured variation in amplitude across the remaining frequency range and/or if the emission corresponds in pitch to the tinnitus pitch
  • Pulsatile somatosounds suggesting presence of abnormal vasculature or high blood pressure contributing to the tinnitus
  • Feigning tinnitus or hearing loss
  • Evidence by audiological testing of a treatable etiology of the tinnitus, such as conductive hearing impairment as shown by pure-tone thresholds, abnormal acoustic immittance, abnormal stapedial reflex test, or abnormal auditory brainstem response
  • Predisposing disease with tinnitus symptoms amenable to medical or surgical intervention, including but not limited to; chronic otitis media, otosclerosis, vestibular disorder or dizziness, Eustachian tube, middle ear, or inner ear disease, Lyme disease or ear autoimmune disease, malocclusion or temporomandibular joint disease, uncontrolled allergies, aberrant ear, head, or neck blood vasculature or glomus tumor, neurological condition such as multiple sclerosis or ear-related demyelinating disease, perilymphatic fistula, or facial weakness or paralysis
  • Meniere's disease
  • Uncontrolled diabetes, defined as blood glucose consistently ≥ 200 mg/dl or an HBA1c above 8%
  • Evidence from any laboratory study that suggests an etiology for the tinnitus that is treatable, including, but not limited to, abnormal thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) or thyroid hormone (T3 or T4) levels, positive fluorescent treponemal antibody (FTA) test, or positive Lyme titer
  • Evidence of a tumor contributing to the tinnitus, including an acoustic neuroma (or vestibular schwannoma), cerebellopontine angle tumor, skull base tumor, or any other type of tumor that the examining physician believes is responsible for the tinnitus
  • Diagnosis of traumatic head or brain injury requiring treatment
  • Diagnosis of an emotional, psychological, or psychiatric condition requiring treatment and resulting in inability to participate in the trial or complete all followup visits, as assessed by best clinical judgment
  • Inability or unwillingness of patient to comply with study requirements
  • Unwillingness of Clinical Center Director to randomize the patient to treatment due to the presence of any condition, physical, mental or social, which is likely to affect the patient returning for follow-up visits on schedule or which is likely to impair his or her performance on the functional tests
  • Inability or unwillingness of patient to provide informed consent

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

151 participants in 3 patient groups

TRT
Experimental group
Description:
TRT includes treatment with a conventional sound generator (SG) and directive counseling (DC)
Treatment:
Behavioral: Directive Counseling (DC)
Behavioral: Directive Counseling (DC)
Device: Conventional sound generator (SG)
Partial TRT
Other group
Description:
Partial TRT includes treatment with a placebo sound generator (placebo SG) and directive counseling (DC).
Treatment:
Behavioral: Directive Counseling (DC)
Behavioral: Directive Counseling (DC)
Device: Placebo sound generator (placebo SG)
Standard of Care (SC)
Other group
Description:
The standard of care arm includes care as typically delivered in US military medical centers
Treatment:
Behavioral: Standard of Care (SC)

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

6

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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