Predictors of Hearing-Aid Outcomes

Trends Hear. 2017 Jan-Dec:21:2331216517730526. doi: 10.1177/2331216517730526.

Abstract

Over 360 million people worldwide suffer from disabling hearing loss. Most of them can be treated with hearing aids. Unfortunately, performance with hearing aids and the benefit obtained from using them vary widely across users. Here, we investigate the reasons for such variability. Sixty-eight hearing-aid users or candidates were fitted bilaterally with nonlinear hearing aids using standard procedures. Treatment outcome was assessed by measuring aided speech intelligibility in a time-reversed two-talker background and self-reported improvement in hearing ability. Statistical predictive models of these outcomes were obtained using linear combinations of 19 predictors, including demographic and audiological data, indicators of cochlear mechanical dysfunction and auditory temporal processing skills, hearing-aid settings, working memory capacity, and pretreatment self-perceived hearing ability. Aided intelligibility tended to be better for younger hearing-aid users with good unaided intelligibility in quiet and with good temporal processing abilities. Intelligibility tended to improve by increasing amplification for low-intensity sounds and by using more linear amplification for high-intensity sounds. Self-reported improvement in hearing ability was hard to predict but tended to be smaller for users with better working memory capacity. Indicators of cochlear mechanical dysfunction, alone or in combination with hearing settings, did not affect outcome predictions. The results may be useful for improving hearing aids and setting patients' expectations.

Keywords: aging; auditory masking; auditory spectral processing; auditory temporal processing; hearing impairment; hearing loss; working memory.

Publication types

  • Evaluation Study

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Aged
  • Aged, 80 and over
  • Auditory Perception
  • Cochlea / physiopathology
  • Correction of Hearing Impairment / instrumentation
  • Female
  • Hearing Aids* / psychology
  • Hearing Loss / physiopathology
  • Hearing Loss / rehabilitation
  • Hearing Loss, Sensorineural / physiopathology
  • Hearing Loss, Sensorineural / rehabilitation*
  • Hearing Tests
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Noise
  • Patient Satisfaction*
  • Perceptual Masking
  • Principal Component Analysis
  • Prosthesis Fitting
  • Self Report
  • Spain
  • Speech Intelligibility*
  • Speech Perception*
  • Treatment Outcome