Audiometric Monitoring for Ototoxicity - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 50
About This Presentation
Title:

Audiometric Monitoring for Ototoxicity

Description:

Audiometric Monitoring for Ototoxicity Alan I. Segal, Au.D., FAAA Advanced Ear Nose & Throat Associates PC * * * * (p.165) * * There are however no hard and fast ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:361
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 51
Provided by: AlanS60
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Audiometric Monitoring for Ototoxicity


1
Audiometric Monitoring for Ototoxicity
  • Alan I. Segal, Au.D., FAAA
  • Advanced Ear Nose Throat Associates PC

2
Audiometric Monitoring for Ototoxicity
  • Material in this presentation is adapted from the
    text Pharmacology Ototoxicity for Audiologists
    by Kathleen C. M. Campbell, Ph. D.

3
Audiometric Monitoring for Ototoxicity
  • Close to 200 prescription and OTC medications
    have ototoxic potential.
  • Drug-induced hearing loss accounts for most
    cases of preventable hearing loss worldwide
  • (Campbell, K., Pharmacology and Ototoxicity for
    Audiologists, 2007, p.171)

4
Audiometric Monitoring for Ototoxicity
  • Two categories of medications that have the
    greatest potential for permanent changes in
    hearing and or balance are aminoglycosides and
    anti-neoplastic agents.

5
(No Transcript)
6
Audiometric Monitoring for Ototoxicity
7
Audiometric Monitoring for Ototoxicity
  • The only way to detect ototoxicity is by
    audiometric monitoring of extended high
    frequencies, above 8 KHz.

8
Pathophysiology of Ototoxicity
  • Hair cells in the inner ear are primarily
    affected with outer hair cells first to be
    destroyed. In the vestibular system type I hair
    cells of the crista of the semi-circular canals
    are targeted

9
Outer Hair Cell Damage from Ototoxicity
10
Incidence of aminoglycoside Ototoxicity
  • Complicated by the fact that definitions of
    hearing loss vary from 10dB at one or more
    frequencies to 20 dB or more at 2 adjacent
    frequencies.
  • Incidence ranges 20-33 for commonly used
    aminoglycosides while balance is affected in 18
    of cases.

11
Risk Factors
  • Long term treatment i.e. TB patients
  • Impaired renal function increases drug
    half-life
  • Concomitant use of loop diuretics
  • Genetic mitochondrial mutations (1555 mutation)

12
Aminoglycoside Ototoxicity
  • Streptomycin was the first aminoglycosides
    antibiotic and the first drug effective against
    TB.
  • Discovered by Selman Waksman et al in 1944.
  • Adverse side effects on the kidney and inner ear
    (vestibular toxicity) were reported in 1945

13
Aminoglycoside Ototoxicity
  • In the last 20 years the use of aminoglycosides
    has declined in industrial societies
  • In developing countries, their effectiveness and
    low cost make them popular.
  • They are often sold OTC and are the most commonly
    used antibiotics worldwide.

14
Aminoglycoside Ototoxicity
  • With the resurgence of drug resistant TB, there
    is renewed interest in aminoglycosides
    specifically streptomycin and amikacin/kanamycin
    as part of the World Health Organization
    recommended multi drug regimen.

15
Effect of Aminoglycosides on Auditory/Vestibular
Functions
  • Studies of human temporal bones and experimental
    animals show inner ear hair cells are the first
    to be affected.
  • Outer hair cells are targeted in the cochlea
    extending from base to apex.
  • Results in high frequency hearing loss which can
    extend to frequencies important to understanding
    speech.

16
Effect of Aminoglycosides on Auditory/Vestibular
Functions
  • In the vestibular system, its primary effect is
    loss of vestibular hair cells in the semi
    circular canals and Utricular macula.
  • This leads to oscillopsia resulting in postural
    instability and risk of fall.
  • It was once believed that maintaining peak and
    trough serum levels of a drug would mitigate
    ototoxic effects.
  • Current evidence shows this not to be the case at
    least for vestibular toxicity.

17
Effect of Aminoglycosides on Auditory/Vestibular
Functions
  • Gentamycin and streptomycin are considered more
    vestibulotoxic.
  • Amikacin and Neomycin are considered more
    cochleo-toxic.

18
Pharmokinetics
  • Presence of the drug does not necessarily cause
    toxicity
  • Concentration of the drug in the inner ear does
    not exceed the serum level
  • Half life in cochlear tissue has been measured to
    exceed one month
  • Traces can be detected up to 6 months following
    the end of treatment.

19
Mechanisms of Aminoglycoside Ototoxicity
  • Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS) formation appears
    to be key.
  • Depletion of anti oxidant Glutathione (GSH)
    enhances ototoxicity while dietary
    supplementation inhibits toxicity.

20
Mechanisms of Aminoglycoside Ototoxicity
  • Is Aminoglycoside ototoxicity preventable?
  • Medications showing promise are d-methiomine and
    salicylate.
  • Two issues need to be solved before protective
    treatment can be considered.
  • Effective drug levels must be maintained.
  • Drug must not interfere with the anti-bacterial
    activity of the aminoglycosides.

21
Mechanisms of Aminoglycoside Ototoxicity
  • One clinical study found aspirin was protective
    reducing incidence of hearing loss by 75.
  • Sha, S. H. , Qui, J. H. Schacht, J. (2006)
    Aspirin to prevent gentamicin-induced hearing
    loss. New England Journal of Medicine, 354,
    1856-7.

22
Chemotheraputic Agents Ototoxicity - Cisplatin
  • Introduced in the 1970s and is effective against
    germ cell, ovarian, endometrial, cervical,
    urothelial, head and neck, brain and lung
    cancers.
  • Highest ototoxic potential and is the most
    ototoxic drug in clinical use.
  • Symptoms of ototoxicity begin with tinnitus and
    high frequency hearing loss.

23
Chemotheraputic Agents Ototoxicity - Cisplatin
  • Incidence of hearing loss has been reported at
    11-91 with an overall incidence of 69.
  • In patients with head and neck cancer treated
    with Cisplatin, about 50 develop hearing loss.

24
Risk Factors for Cisplatin Ototoxicity
  • Intravenous bolus administration or high
    cumulative dose
  • Young children, under 5 years, or older gt 46
    years
  • Renal insufficiency
  • Prior cranial irradiation
  • Co-administration of vincristin

25
Risk Factors for Cisplatin Ototoxicity
  • The best predictor of cisplatin ototoxicity is
    cumulative dose.
  • The critical dose is 3-4 mg/Kg body weight.
  • Ototoxicity increased dramatically when the total
    cumulative dose exceeds 400 mg/m2

26
Characteristics of Cisplatin Ototoxicity
  • Bilateral and permanent. High frequencies
    affected first.
  • It can occur suddenly. Speech discrimination may
    be markedly affected.

27
Mechanisms of Cisplatin Ototoxicity
  • Hearing loss affected by free radical formation
    and anti-oxidant inhibition.
  • Formation of reactive oxygen radicals produces
    glutathione depletion in the cochlea and lipid
    peroxidation.
  • Induced apoptosis in hair cells causing permanent
    hearing loss.

28
Carboplatin
  • Introduced due to its lower nephrotoxicity than
    cisplatin.
  • It is used to treat small cell lung cancer,
    ovarian and head and neck cancers.

29
Carboplatin Toxicity
  • The dose limiting factor had been bone marrow
    toxicity.
  • Overcome with autologous stem cell rescue
    allowing larger doses to be used.
  • Initial reports seemed to indicate less
    ototoxicity
  • Increase in dose and effectiveness came at the
    expense of increased ototoxicity.

30
Carboplatin Toxicity
  • The mechanism of carboplatin ototoxicity is
    related to production of ROS (Reactive Oxygen
    Species).
  • In experimental animals, pretreatment with a drug
    that inhibits glutathione (Guthionine
    sulfoximine) enhanced carboplatin ototoxicity.
  • Other experiments have shown pretreatment with
    anti-oxidant (D-Methionine) reduced the ototoxic
    effect.

31
Carboplatin Toxicity Summary
  • For equivalent dosing, carboplatin is less toxic
    than cisplatin but higher doses of carboplatin
    are used increasing ototoxicity.

32
Ototoxic Monitoring
  • Ototoxicity is determined by establishing
    baseline hearing test data ideally prior to
    treatment.
  • Results are compared to serial audiograms
    allowing the patient to serve as their own
    control.

33
Ototoxic Monitoring
  • The highest frequencies measuring 100 dB or less
    are monitored with testing ideally occurring just
    prior to each chemotherapeutic dose
  • Monitoring 1-2 times per week for patients
    receiving ototoxic antibiotics.
  • Post treatment evaluations are conducted as soon
    as possible after dispensing the drug and
    repeated at 1, 3 and 6 month post treatment.

34
Ototoxic Monitoring
  • The customized test protocol is called the
    Sensitive Range for Ototoxicity, or SRO and
    differs for each patient.
  • It consists of the highest frequencies with
    thresholds 100 dB or better followed by the next
    six lower frequencies.
  • The SRO is established during baseline testing
    prior to ototoxic drug administration.

35
(No Transcript)
36
(No Transcript)
37
Summary
  • Audiometric monitoring using the patients own
    extended high frequency thresholds as a control,
    is the most sensitive method to detect
    ototoxicity.
  • The test is easily tolerated
  • High frequency hearing is affected first
  • Speech perception can degrade if hearing loss
    extends below 8KHz.

38
Advocacy
  • Prevention of hearing loss not usually first
    consideration of medical personnel
  • The PA as advocate
  • Potential hearing loss is quality of life
    consideration
  • Hearing aids are not a cure

39
(No Transcript)
40
(No Transcript)
41
(No Transcript)
42
(No Transcript)
43
(No Transcript)
44
(No Transcript)
45
(No Transcript)
46
(No Transcript)
47
(No Transcript)
48
(No Transcript)
49
(No Transcript)
50
(No Transcript)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com