Outcomes of Cochlear implantation in early‐deafened patients with Waardenburg syndrome: A systematic review and narrative synthesis

Author:

Lovett Amy1ORCID,Eastwood Michael1ORCID,Metcalfe Chris12ORCID,Muzaffar Jameel23ORCID,Monksfield Peter2ORCID,Bance Manohar3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Royal Stoke University Hospital Stoke on Trent UK

2. University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham Edgbaston UK

3. Department of Clinical Neurosciences University of Cambridge Cambridge UK

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveThis systematic review aims to establish the expected hearing and speech outcomes following cochlear implantation (CI) in patients with profound congenital deafness secondary to Waardenburg syndrome (WS).MethodsA systematic review of the literature and narrative synthesis was performed in accordance with the PRISMA statement. Databases searched: Medline, Pubmed, Embase, Web of Science, Cochrane Collection, and ClinicalTrials.gov. No limits were placed on language or year of publication.ResultsSearches identified 186 abstracts and full texts. Of these, 16 studies met inclusion criteria reporting outcomes in 179 patients and at least 194 implants. Hearing outcomes of those receiving cochlear implantation were generally good. Five studies included genetic analysis of one or more of the participants. A total of 11 peri/post‐operative complications were reported. The methodological quality of included studies was modest, mainly comprising noncontrolled case series with small cohort size. All studies were OCEBM grade III–IV.ConclusionCochlear implantation in congenitally deafened children with Waardenburg Syndrome is a well‐established intervention as a method of auditory rehabilitation. Due to the uncommon nature of the condition, there is a lack of large‐scale high‐quality studies examining the use of cochlear implantation in this patient group. However, overall outcomes following implantation are positive with the majority of patients demonstrating improved audiometry, speech perception and speech intelligibility supporting its use in appropriately selected cases.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine

Reference41 articles.

1. A new syndrome combining developmental anomalies of the eyelids, eyebrows and nose root with pigmentary defects of the iris and head hair and with congenital deafness;Waardenburg PJ;Am J Hum Genet,1951

2. NIH Genetics Home Reference.Waardenburg Syndrome. Aug 18 2020.https://ghr.nlm.nih.gov/condition/waardenburg-syndrome#statistics

3. Hearing loss in Waardenburg syndrome: a systematic review

4. Hearing loss and Waardenburg's syndrome: Implications for genetic counselling

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