The purpose of this study is to find out whether the High Frequency Digit Triplet test can be used to screen patients with cystic fibrosis for hearing loss in conditions of health and pulmonary exacerbation. It is also designed to find out the youngest age at which a child can perform the test, the prevalence of hearing loss in a CF population and the prevalence of genetic mutations known to be associated with hearing loss in the same population.
Patients will be identified from the clinic list of four Cystic Fibrosis centres (Nottingham University Hospitals NHS (National Health Service) Trust, adults and children, West Midlands Adult Cystic Fibrosis Centre and Birmingham Children's Hospital). In the first work stream patients 11 years old and over will answer some hearing screening questions and an ear examination and tympanogram. They will then have the new test (the High Frequency Digit Triplet, HFDT, test), the standard tests (Pure tone audiogram (PTA) including high frequencies, Distortion Product Otoacoustic Emissions) and then repeat the new test to look for order effect. These will be compared to validate the HFDT as a screening tool for hearing loss. In the second work stream the investigators are looking to see if the test is feasible when a patient is unwell and about to start a course of IV antibiotics. The patients will have the same tests as in work stream 1 (though the high-frequency PTA may be modified if they are too unwell to complete it). They will then have the tests repeated at the next clinic visit (approximately 6-8 weeks later). In the third work stream children aged 5-10 years will have the same tests. This is to discover the youngest age at which the HFDT test can reliably be performed. To ensure that the CF condition does not itself affect the ability to perform the test the investigators will compare CF children to healthy control children the same age. The investigators will take blood and saliva samples from CF patients to look for mutations in mitochondrial genes which are known to be associated with aminoglycoside induced hearing loss.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SCREENING
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
388
Birmingham Children's Hospital NHS Foundation Trust
Birmingham, United Kingdom
RECRUITINGHeart of England NHS Foundation Trust
Birmingham, United Kingdom
RECRUITINGNottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust
Nottingham, United Kingdom
RECRUITINGProportion of patients in whom the HFDT test accurately predicts the presence of absence of hearing loss.
This will be done in patients when they are clinically stable and at the beginning and end of a pulmonary exacerbation by comparing the HFDT test with the current gold standard test.
Time frame: 2 years
The youngest age at which 80% of children are able to perform the HFDT test.
This will be done in children aged 5-10 years and the
Time frame: 2 years
The prevalence of hearing loss in a CF population.
Time frame: 2 years
The prevalence of genetic mutations that are associated with hearing loss in a CF population.
Time frame: 2 years
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