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Validation of Cognitive Screenings for the Hearing Impaired

University College London (UCL) logo

University College London (UCL)

Status

Terminated

Conditions

Hearing Loss
Auditory Processing Disorder
Dementia

Treatments

Diagnostic Test: Cognitive tests and hearing tests

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03648502
18/0306

Details and patient eligibility

About

There are currently no cognitive tests that have been validated as screening tools for people with dementia and comorbid hearing loss. This is particularly important given the high prevalence of hearing impairment in older adults presenting to memory services and the risk of misdiagnosis of dementia in this population as outlined above.

Cognitive tests validated in hearing impaired populations will also be important as outcome tools for interventional research aiming to find out if treating hearing loss may reduce dementia risk in the longer term.

Full description

Hearing loss is very prevalent in older population. This leads to further problems such as communication problem, isolation from the community and depression. Moreover, hearing impairment may potentially affect the patients' cognitive function as demonstrated in the above mentioned published papers.

Communication problems that arise from a hearing loss alone can also interfere with administration of cognitive test battery, as a previous study showed that re-administered of MMSE test with assistive listening device can immediately improve the test score among elderly (1).

Therefore, special adaptation of the cognitive test battery to address the needs of hearing impaired older adult is necessary. This is to ensure that the test result reflects the exact cognitive state of the older adult with hearing impairment, not effected by hearing loss.

Moreover, appropriate cut-off point scores for hearing impaired population should be identified for these new cognitive screening tools. This is to ensure appropriate referral for further diagnosis and prompt management for cognitive impairment/dementia among older adults with hearing loss.

In addition, since hearing loss can potentially lead to deterioration in patients' cognitive function over time (2). Follow up assessments of cognitive function among older adults with hearing impairment can determine the rate of deterioration in retrospective trial(2). This prospective trial follow up of cognitive function among hearing loss participants may uncover additional risk factors associated with the deterioration. Better understanding of these risk factors can potentially lead to further intervention in order to delay decline in patients' cognitive function.

Enrollment

78 patients

Sex

All

Ages

65+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Age over 65 years
  • Documented Hearing loss (currently wearing hearing aids and/or hearing testing with a hearing average of >/= 30dB HL in D-HI,MCI-HI group)

Exclusion criteria

  • Uncorrected visual impairment; cognitive and/or physical disability(s) which prevent the performance of the written/drawing elements of the tests, in the opinion of the researcher.
  • Severe to profound hearing loss (PTA >70dBHL)

Trial design

Primary purpose

Diagnostic

Allocation

Non-Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

78 participants in 3 patient groups

dementia (D-HI)
Experimental group
Description:
hearing impaired dementia
Treatment:
Diagnostic Test: Cognitive tests and hearing tests
Mild cognitive impairment (MCI-HI)
Other group
Description:
MCI with hearing loss
Treatment:
Diagnostic Test: Cognitive tests and hearing tests
normal (N-HI)
Active Comparator group
Description:
normal cognition with hearing loss
Treatment:
Diagnostic Test: Cognitive tests and hearing tests

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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