Affiliation:
1. Otolaryngology, The University of Mississippi Medical Center, Jackson, United States
2. Otolaryngology and Communicative Sciences, University of Mississippi Medical Center, Jackson, United States
3. University of Mississippi School of Medicine, Jackson, United States
4. University of South Carolina School of Medicine, Columbia, United States
5. Lake Erie College of Osteopathic Medicine, Erie, United States
6. Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, United States
Abstract
Background: There is a well-known metric to describe average/normal vision, 20/20, but the same agreed upon standard does not exist for hearing. The pure tone average has been advocated for such a metric.
Purpose: We aimed to use a data driven approach to inform a universal metric for hearing status based on pure tone audiometry and perceived hearing difficulty (PHD).
Research Design: Cross-sectional national representative survey of the civilian non-institutionalized population in the United States.
Study sample: Data from the 2011-2012 and 2015-2016 cycles of the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) was used in our analysis. Of 9,444 participants aged 20-69 years old from the 2011-2012 and 2015-2016 cycles, we excluded those with missing self-reported hearing difficulty (n=8) and pure tone audiometry data (n=1,361). The main analysis sample, therefore, included 8,075 participants. We completed a sub-analysis limited to participants with “normal” hearing based on the WHO standard (pure tone average, PTA of 500, 1000, 2000, 4000 Hz < 20 dBHL).
Analysis: Descriptive analyses to calculate means and proportions were used to describe characteristics of the analysis sample across PHD levels relative to PTA. Four PTAs were compared, low frequency (LF-PTA, 500, 1000, 2000 Hz), four frequency PTA (PTA4, 500, 1000, 2000, 4000 Hz), high frequency (HF-PTA, 4000, 6000, 8000 Hz) and all frequency (AF-PTA, 500, 1000, 2000, 4000, 6000, 8000 Hz). Differences between groups were tested using Rao-Scott χ2 tests for categorical variables and F tests for continuous variables. Logistic regression was used to plot receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves with PHD as a function of PTA. The sensitivity and specificity for each PTA and PHD was also calculated.
Results: We found that 19.61% of adults aged 20-69 years reported PHD, with only 1.41% reporting greater than moderate PHD. The prevalence of reported PHD increased with higher decibel hearing levels (dBHL) categories reaching statistical significance (p < 0.05 with Bonferroni correction) at 6-10 dBHL for PTAs limited to lower frequencies (LF-PTA and PTA4) and 16-20 dBHL when limited to higher frequencies (HF-PTA). The prevalence of greater than moderate PHD reached statistical significance at 21-30 dBHL when limited to lower frequencies (LF-PTA) and 41-55 dBHL when limited to higher frequencies (HF-PTA). Forty percent of the sample had high frequency loss with normal low frequency hearing, representing nearly 70% of hearing loss configurations. The diagnostic accuracy of the PTAs for reported PHD was poor to sufficient (< 0.70), however the HF-PTA had the highest sensitivity (0.81).
Conclusions: We provide three basic recommendations for clinical application based on our analysis. 1). A PTA based metric for hearing ability should include frequencies above 4000 Hz. 2). The data driven cutoff for any PHD/normal hearing is 15 dBHL. When considering greater than moderate PHD, the data driven cutoffs were more variable but estimated at 20-30 dBHL for LF-PTA, 30-35 for PTA4, 25-50 for AF-PTA, and 40-65 for HF-PTA. 3). Clinical recommendations and legislative agendas should include consideration beyond pure tone audiometry such as functional assessment of hearing and PHD.
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