Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT04192968

Follow-up of Cochlear Implanted Children at 3 Years : Comparison of Electrophysiological and Speech-language Results

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
50 (actual)
Sponsor
Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
42 Months – 17 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The objective of the study is to compare the responses recorded with automated cortical auditory evoked potentials, of children who had one or two cochlear implants for 3 years, and the results of the speech therapy assessment. 24 patients in the main ImplantHear3 study presented with disappointing language development or poor cortical responses. These patients will be followed up once a year, during a visit scheduled for the usual care, until 6 years post-implant, in order to make it possible to objectify the quality of the auditory rehabilitation received by the child.

Detailed description

Children with severe to profound deafness can benefit from cochlear rehabilitation, combined with a speech-language therapy. At present, 70 to 80% of children with congenital - profound deafness who are implanted at an early age will have a language level identical to their hearing peers. But 20 to 30% of them will be able to present linguistic difficulties. The objective recording of the cortical activity in response to a sound stimulus gives a proof of the quality of the auditory stimulation that is perceived by the cortex, an essential condition for the further linguistic development of the child. By the use of complex stimuli of speeching type, all the channels involved in the auditory processing are analyzed. The recording in routine clinical practice of the cortical auditory evoked potentials in response to a vocal stimulus makes it possible to objectify the quality of the auditory rehabilitation received by the child. The implanted children all benefit from regular and prolonged speech therapy follow-up, with a complete evaluation every year. It is important to regularly monitor the linguistic evolution of young children who are implanted in order to identify children at risk of poorer linguistic development at an early age. The objective of the study is to compare the responses recorded with automated cortical auditory evoked potentials, of children who had one or two cochlear implants for 3 years, and the results of the speech therapy assessment. 24 patients in the main ImplantHear3 study presented with disappointing language development or poor cortical responses. These patients will be followed up to 6 years post-implant by carrying out, during a visit scheduled for patient care, once a year for 3 years: * Recording of automated cortical auditory evoked potentials in response to a vocal stimulus, as performed for the main study, but also : * Recording of cortical auditory evoked potentials in response to a click * Realization of electrical potentials via the implant And this in order to make it possible to objectify the quality of the auditory rehabilitation received by the child. The objectives of the ancillary study are : Comparison of the responses recorded to automated cortical auditory evoked potentials, of children who have had one or two cochlear implants for 4 years, with the results of speech therapy and up to 6 years post-implant. Look for prognostic factors of poor linguistic development: correlate the electrophysiological results, the adjustment parameters, the modalities of hearing rehabilitation, the side of the cochlear implantation, and the audiometric thresholds with the results of the speech therapy assessment.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERCortical auditory evoked potentialsRecording of automated cortical auditory evoked potentials in response to a vocal stimulus.
OTHERAdditional exams* Cortical auditory evoked potentials Recording of automated cortical auditory evoked potentials in response to a vocal stimulus. * Recording of cortical auditory evoked potentials in response to a click * Realization of electrical potentials via the implant Followed up once a year during a visit scheduled for usual care, for 3 years, that to say up to 6 years post-implant.

Timeline

Start date
2020-01-13
Primary completion
2024-04-13
Completion
2024-04-13
First posted
2019-12-10
Last updated
2025-09-12

Locations

1 site across 1 country: France

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04192968. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.