Ototoxicity in cystic fibrosis patients receiving intravenous tobramycin for acute pulmonary exacerbation: Ototoxicity following tobramycin treatment

E Emily Harruff, Jonathan Kil, Maria Gabriela Tupayachi Ortiz, Daniel Dorgan, Raksha Jain, Elizabeth A Poth, Robert C Fifer, Yun Jin M Kim, Angela G Shoup, Patrick A Flume, E Emily Harruff, Jonathan Kil, Maria Gabriela Tupayachi Ortiz, Daniel Dorgan, Raksha Jain, Elizabeth A Poth, Robert C Fifer, Yun Jin M Kim, Angela G Shoup, Patrick A Flume

Abstract

Aminoglycosides are commonly used to treat infections in CF patients and are highly ototoxic. The incidence of tobramycin-induced hearing loss, tinnitus, vertigo or dizziness (ototoxicity) varies widely from 0 to 56% secondary to variation in patient enrollment, dosing, audiometry, and ototoxic criteria. The aim of this study is to determine the incidence of ototoxicity after one course of once-daily IV tobramycin in CF patients. Adult CF patients with acute pulmonary exacerbations were enrolled on IV tobramycin (10 mg/kg/d, ≥10 days). Pure-tone audiometry was performed for standard and extended high frequencies in the sensitive range for ototoxicity (SRO). American-Speech-Language-Hearing-Association cochleotoxicity criteria were applied. Distortion product otoacoustic emissions (DPOAE) and the words-in-noise-test (WINT) were assessed. Tinnitus Functional Index (TFI) and Vertigo Symptoms Scale (VSS) were used. Eighteen CF patients, mean age 31.1 (18-59), were enrolled. The incidence of cochleotoxic change from baseline at 2 and 4 weeks post-treatment was 89% and 93%. For DPOAE, a measure of outer hair-cell function, the incidence of ≥5 dB decrease was 82% and 80%. For WINT, a measure of word recognition, the incidence of ≥10% decrease was 17% and 40%. For TFI, the incidence of ≥10pt increase was 12% and 8%, and for VSS, the incidence of ≥6pt increase was 0% and 8%. One course of IV tobramycin was sufficient to cause hearing loss and other ototoxic symptoms four weeks after treatment ended. Audiometric measures were more sensitive to ototoxic change than TFI & VSS. Age and duration of tobramycin treatment were not obvious factors for predicting ototoxicity.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02819856.

Keywords: Aminoglycoside; Cystic fibrosis; Hearing loss; Ototoxicity; Tinnitus; Tobramycin.

Copyright © 2020. Published by Elsevier B.V.

Source: PubMed

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