Depending on the criteria used to assess hearing loss due to treatment, differences in ototoxicity between CRT-IA and CRT-IV were found in favor of CRT-IA. It is desirable to specify hearing loss criteria toward frequencies vital for speech perception, and to refine grading scales to reveal subtle and clinically relevant dissimilarities in ototoxicity between different treatment protocols.
This study describes audiometric patterns of ototoxicity in a consecutive series of patients uniformly treated with intra-arterial high-dose cisplatin chemoirradiation for advanced cancer of the head and neck. Air conduction thresholds were measured from 0.125 to 16 kHz and bone conduction thresholds were measured from 0.5 to 4 kHz. The overall audiometric pattern was characterized by maximum threshold shifts after the 2nd cisplatin infusion and a maximum total threshold shift at 8 kHz, irrespective of gender, age, pretreatment sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) or subjective complaints during therapy. A hearing deterioration gradient was observed from (ultra-) high to low frequencies, worse with increasing pre-existent SNHL and with increasing cumulative dose of cisplatin chemoradiation. Cisplatin chemoradiation-induced hearing loss seemed to reach a plateau at higher levels (75–80 dB HL) for frequencies above 8 kHz compared to frequencies up to 8 kHz (45–60 dB HL). Recovery of SNHL was found after therapy in 27 ears characterized by extensive hearing loss at frequencies 1, 2 and 4 kHz.
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