Researchers Begin First-Ever Study of Stem Cells to Treat Hearing Loss

Discussion in 'Research News' started by mock turtle, Aug 17, 2012.

    1. mock turtle

      mock turtle Member

      Location:
      puget sound
      Tinnitus Since:
      07/26/1992...habituated after 2 years; 11/04/11 new outbreak
      http://www.asha.org/Publications/le...Study-of-Stem-Cells-to-Treat-Hearing-Loss.htm

      Regenerating Hearing: Researchers Begin First-Ever Study of Stem Cells to Treat Hearing Loss


      The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved a groundbreaking trial to evaluate the safety of using a child's own cord-blood stem cells to regenerate cells in the inner ear—and potentially restore the child's hearing. The year-long Phase 1 study, which began on Jan. 10, will follow 10 children who have a moderate to profound unilateral or bilateral hearing loss.

      To date, more than 20,000 umbilical-cord-blood transplants have been performed worldwide to treat a wide range of diseases, including leukemia and specific blood disorders (Mayani, 2011). This area of research has led to clinical trials using a child's own umbilical-cord blood in experimental therapies for patients with various conditions, including cerebral palsy, brain injury, juvenile diabetes—and now hearing loss (Forraz & McGuckin, 2011).

      Hearing aids or cochlear implants coupled with therapeutic intervention are currently the standard treatments of choice for hearing loss. Although there have been significant technological advances in the development of hearing aids and cochlear implants, these options do not restore or repair hearing. With medical research heavily focused on regenerative medicine and stem cell therapy, the question looms: Is there a potential medical treatment that uses stem cell therapy to repair a damaged cochlea?

      Researching Stem Cell Therapies
      Preclinical research in animals with an acquired sensorineural hearing loss shows great promise for improving hearing, with significant cochlear repair occurring after human umbilical-cord-blood stem cell transplants (Revoltella et al., 2008). Stem cells were transplanted into mice deafened by treatment with kanamycin—an antibiotic known to cause hearing loss—and intense noise. The results of the study verified that human umbilical cord stem cells engrafted in the mice cochlea resulted in inner ear repair. Because the stem cells migrated to the Organ of Corti—where they regrew hair cells and repaired spiral ganglion neurons—there was strong evidence that stem cells may emerge as a potential treatment to repair a human's damaged inner ear and to improve hearing.

      Researchers at Children's Memorial Hermann Hospital in Houston were spurred by these and other findings to apply for an FDA-regulated Phase 1 trial. They sought to determine the safety of an autologous umbilical-cord-blood transplant for children with an acquired sensorineural hearing loss. This type of stem cell transplant uses the patient's own stem cells to avoid any immune complications that may arise from using donor cells.

      If parents choose to bank cord blood for future use, health care providers collect stem cells from the umbilical cord blood immediately after a baby's birth and store them at very low temperatures (approximately –196 degrees Celsius) at a cord-blood bank. Umbilical cord blood provides abundant cells for transplantation, and autologous cord blood transplants historically have a high degree of safety (Mayani, 2011).

      FDA-Approved Clinical Trial
      FDA approval of this trial marks the first study of stem cells to treat sensorineural hearing loss in children. Ten children—ages 6 weeks to 18 months—will receive transplants; after the procedures, they will participate in educational programs focused on auditory-verbal treatment. Auditory-verbal treatment is used to develop a child's spoken language by building a strong auditory foundation while coaching and guiding parents in individualized treatment. The children will also receive regular post-transplant medical evaluations to determine the safety of the infusion.

      Researchers will collect data from aided and unaided audiograms, language samples, and phonetic inventories pre- and post-transplant. Children who were not fitted with hearing aids within 6 months of the diagnosis of a hearing loss, or who are deaf as a result of a genetic anomaly or syndromes, are not eligible to participate in this clinical trial.

      Physicians and researchers at Children's Memorial Hermann-Houston Medical Center are hopeful they can demonstrate that medical treatment for a sensorineural hearing loss in young children is viable. "Currently, the only treatment options for sensorineural hearing loss are hearing aids or cochlear implants," said principal investigator Samer Fakhri, surgeon at Memorial Hermann-Texas Medical Center and associate professor and program director in the Department of Otorhinolaryngology–Head & Neck Surgery at the University of Texas School of Medicine. "We hope that this study will open avenues to additional treatment options for hearing loss in children."
      Linda Baumgartner—a co-investigator and auditory-verbal therapist from Winter Park, Florida—agreed. "This study is exciting because it might offer a nonsurgical option for some children with profound loss," she said. "More importantly, this is the first treatment with the potential to repair damage and improve hearing."
       
    2. Karl

      Karl Member Benefactor

      Location:
      Chicago
      Tinnitus Since:
      10/2011
      Amazing groundbreaking news!
       
    3. Fish
      Balanced

      Fish Member Benefactor

      Location:
      Poland
      Tinnitus Since:
      July 2012
      Hello! It is excellent news indeed, I also thought this similar story would be worth mentioning (if it was posted here before, sorry!):

      Cord Blood Stem Cells Restore Toddler's Hearing July 11, 2012

      A virus infection Stephanie Connor acquired during pregnancy put her unborn daughter at significant risk for brain damage and lifelong hearing loss. At age 1, baby Madeleine was completely deaf in her right ear and her hearing was severely lost in the left, said Connor. While a hearing aid helped to amplify some sounds for Madeleine, it would never fully repair the damage in her ear. But a simple experimental procedure that Connor enrolled in for Madeleine may have restored her hearing and reversed her condition.

      In January 2012, Madeleine, 2, became the first child to undergo an experimental hearing loss treatment through an FDA-approved trial at Memorial Hermann-Texas Medical Center that infused stem cells from her own banked cord blood into her damaged inner ear.

      Within the last six months, Connor says she's seen a dramatic improvement in Madeleine's ability to hear.
      "Before, when she would hear something she would look all around," Connor said. "But now we notice that she turns in the right direction of the sound."

      Full story here: http://abcnews.go.com/Health/Wellne...earing-toddler/story?id=16750718#.UDD-haOrGfW
       
    4. AUTHOR
      AUTHOR
      mock turtle

      mock turtle Member

      Location:
      puget sound
      Tinnitus Since:
      07/26/1992...habituated after 2 years; 11/04/11 new outbreak
      yep its long past due
       
    5. lost horizons

      lost horizons Member

      Tinnitus Since:
      June 2014
      So, whatever came of this ?
       
    6. tomytl
      Grumpy

      tomytl Member Benefactor

      Tinnitus Since:
      10 Years
      Cause of Tinnitus:
      unknown
    7. rsmcfar

      rsmcfar Member

      Tinnitus Since:
      02/28/2014
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