PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Chemo drug may cause significant hearing loss in longtime cancer survivors

Study is the first to measure real-world hearing loss progression in cancer survivors over a long period of time

2024-06-28
(Press-News.org) TAMPA, Fla. (June 28, 2024) -- An interdisciplinary study led by researchers at the University of South Florida and Indiana University has uncovered significant findings on the long-term effects of one of the most common forms of chemotherapy on cancer survivors.

Published in the Journal of the American Medical Association Oncology, the study tracked a cohort of testicular cancer survivors who received cisplatin-based chemotherapy for an average of 14 years, revealing that 78% experience significant difficulties in everyday listening situations, negatively impacting their quality of life. This collaborative research is the first to measure real-world listening challenges and hearing loss progression in cancer survivors over a long period of time.

“It’s important that we understand the real-world effects of patients’ sensory problems and if we can understand that, then we can develop better therapeutic strategies and preventive measures to improve the long-term quality of life for cancer survivors,” said Robert Frisina, distinguished university professor and chair of the USF Department of Medical Engineering.

Cisplatin is commonly used in chemotherapy treatments for a variety of cancers, including bladder, lung, neck and testicular. It is administered intravenously and affects various parts of the body. However, the ears are particularly vulnerable as they have little ability to filter out the drug, causing it to become trapped. This leads to inflammation and the destruction of sensory cells that are critical for coding sound, causing permanent hearing loss that can progressively get worse well after cisplatin treatments are completed.

Lead author Victoria Sanchez, associate professor in the USF Health Department of Otolaryngology Head & Neck Surgery, said that despite the known risks, there’s a nationwide lack of routine hearing assessments for patients undergoing chemotherapy. “Most patients still do not get their hearing tested prior to, during or after chemotherapy. Our study highlights the need for regular auditory evaluations to manage and mitigate long-term hearing damage.”

The research team found higher doses of cisplatin led to more severe and progressing hearing loss, especially in patients with risk factors, such as high blood pressure and poor cardiovascular health. They also experienced increased difficulty hearing in common environments, such as a loud restaurant.

“It will be critically important to follow these patients for life. Their current median age is only 48 years, and eventually they will enter the years at which age-related hearing loss also begins to develop,” said Dr. Lois B. Travis, Lawrence H. Einhorn Professor of Cancer Research at Indiana University School of Medicine and a researcher at the IU Melvin and Bren Simon Comprehensive Cancer Center. This research is part of The Platinum Study, an ongoing research effort led by Dr. Travis and funded by the National Cancer Institute to study cisplatin-treated testicular cancer survivors.

The hope is that this study will inspire further investigation into alternative chemotherapeutic protocols and preventive measures, such as FDA-approved drugs to prevent or reduce hearing loss.

“This research gives oncologists the information they need to explore alternative treatment plans that could reduce the long-term side effects, such as altering the dosages and timing of the cisplatin in the treatment, when that could be an appropriate option,” Frisina said.

Innovative solutions, such as Pedmark, a new FDA-approved injection that mitigates cisplatin-induced hearing loss in children, represent promising steps forward, according to Frisina.

“We want to protect our hearing or treat a hearing loss if hearing damage occurs,” Sanchez said. “Hearing allows us to connect to the world we love. Staying connected through conversations with family and friends, enjoyment of music and entertainment, staying safe and finding pleasure in our vibrant surroundings. Promoting optimal hearing for overall wellness is essential for healthy living.”

According to the American Cancer Society, in addition to cisplatin, other platinum chemotherapy drugs, such as carboplatin, cause damage to the cochlea in the inner ear and lead to hearing loss. The risk of damage is greater with higher doses of chemotherapy.

Media contacts

University of South Florida
John Dudley
jjdudley@usf.edu
814-490-3290

Indiana University
Candace Gwaltney
cmgwaltn@iu.edu
317-278-4322

###

About the University of South Florida

The University of South Florida, a high-impact research university dedicated to student success and committed to community engagement, generates an annual economic impact of more than $6 billion. With campuses in Tampa, St. Petersburg and Sarasota-Manatee, USF serves approximately 50,000 students who represent nearly 150 different countries. U.S. News & World Report has ranked USF as one of the nation’s top 50 public universities for five consecutive years, and this year USF earned its highest ranking ever among all universities public or private. In 2023, USF became the first public university in Florida in nearly 40 years to be invited to join the Association of American Universities, a prestigious group of the leading universities in the United States and Canada. Through hundreds of millions of dollars in research activity each year and as one of the top universities in the world for securing new patents, USF is a leader in solving global problems and improving lives. USF is a member of the American Athletic Conference. Learn more at www.usf.edu.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Study reveals why AI models that analyze medical images can be biased

2024-06-28
Artificial intelligence models often play a role in medical diagnoses, especially when it comes to analyzing images such as X-rays. However, studies have found that these models don’t always perform well across all demographic groups, usually faring worse on women and people of color.  These models have also been shown to develop some surprising abilities. In 2022, MIT researchers reported that AI models can make accurate predictions about a patient’s race from their chest X-rays — something that the most skilled radiologists can’t do.  That research team has now found that the models that are most accurate at making demographic predictions ...

New class of Mars quakes reveals daily meteorite strikes

New class of Mars quakes reveals daily meteorite strikes
2024-06-28
In brief: For the first time, researchers use seismic data to estimate a global meteorite impact rate showing meteoroids the size of a basketball impact Mars on a near daily basis. Impact-generated seismic signals show meteorite impacts to be 5-times more abundant than previously thought. Seismic data offers a new tool, in addition to observational data, for calculating meteorite impact rates and planning future Mars missions An international team of researchers, co-lead by ETH Zurich and Imperial College London, have derived the first estimate of global meteorite impacts on Mars using seismic data. Their findings indicate between 280 to 360 meteorites strike ...

Gene therapy halts progression of rare genetic condition in young boy

Gene therapy halts progression of rare genetic condition in young boy
2024-06-28
When Michael Pirovolakis received an individualized gene therapy in a single-patient clinical trial at The Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids) in March 2022, the course of his condition was dramatically altered.  Michael has spastic paraplegia type 50 (SPG50), an “ultra-rare” progressive neurodegenerative disorder that causes developmental delays, speech impairment, seizures, a progressive paralysis of all four limbs, and typically fatal by adulthood. Approximately 80 children around the world ...

New predictors of metastasis in patients with early-stage pancreatic cancer

New predictors of metastasis in patients with early-stage pancreatic cancer
2024-06-28
Researchers at Weill Cornell Medicine with an international team have used liver biopsies to identify cellular and molecular markers that can potentially be used to predict whether and when pancreatic cancer will spread to an individual’s liver or elsewhere, such as the lung. The study, published on June 28 in Nature Medicine, proposes that information from a liver biopsy—a small tissue sample collected for lab analysis—when pancreatic cancer is diagnosed may help guide doctors in personalizing treatment, such as liver-directed immunotherapies, before cancer cells have the chance to metastasize. Only 10 percent of people with pancreatic ...

Climate change to shift tropical rains northward

Climate change to shift tropical rains northward
2024-06-28
  A study led by a UC Riverside atmospheric scientist predicts that unchecked carbon emissions will force tropical rains to shift northward in the coming decades, which would profoundly impact agriculture and economies near the Earth's equator. The northward rain shift would be caused by complex changes in the atmosphere spurred by carbon emissions that influence the formation of the intertropical convergence zones. Those zones are essentially atmospheric engines that drive about a third of the world’s precipitation, Liu and his co-authors report in a paper published Friday, June 28, in the journal Nature Climate Change. Tropical ...

City of Hope study suggests changing the gut microbiome improves health outcomes for people newly diagnosed with metastatic kidney cancer

City of Hope study suggests changing the gut microbiome improves health outcomes for people newly diagnosed with metastatic kidney cancer
2024-06-28
LOS ANGELES — Physician scientists from City of Hope, one of the largest cancer research and treatment organizations in the United States, found that people with metastatic kidney cancer who orally took a live biotherapeutic product called CBM588 while in treatment with immunotherapy and enzymatic tyrosine kinase inhibitors experienced improved health outcomes. The phase 1 trial was published today in Nature Medicine. Microorganisms in the gut modulate the immune system. City of Hope researchers are now in discussions with the global SWOG Cancer ...

Surprising meteorite impact rate on Mars can act as ‘cosmic clock’

Surprising meteorite impact rate on Mars can act as ‘cosmic clock’
2024-06-28
Seismic signals have suggested Mars gets hit by around 300 basketball-sized meteorites every year, providing a new tool for dating planetary surfaces. The new research, led by scientists at Imperial College London and ETH Zurich working as part of NASA's InSight mission, has shed light on how often ‘marsquakes’ caused by meteorite impacts occur on Mars. The researchers found that Mars experiences around 280 to 360 meteorite impacts every year that produce craters larger than eight metres in diameter and shake the red planet’s ...

Air pollution exposure during childhood linked directly to adult bronchitis symptoms in new research

2024-06-28
A new study brings fresh revelations about the connection between early-life exposure to air pollution and lung health later in life. A research team led by the Keck School of Medicine of USC has shown that exposure to air pollution during childhood is directly associated with bronchitis symptoms as an adult. To date, many investigations in the field have established intuitive links that are less direct than that: Air pollution exposure while young is consistently associated with lung problems during childhood — and childhood lung problems are consistently associated with lung issues as an adult.   The current study, published in the American Journal of Respiratory ...

Kids given ‘digital pacifiers’ to calm tantrums fail to learn how to regulate emotions, study finds

2024-06-28
Children learn much about self-regulation – that is affective, mental, and behavioral responses to certain situations – during their first few years of life. Some of these behaviors are about children’s ability to choose a deliberate response over an automatic one. This is known as effortful control, which is learned from the environment, first and foremost through children’s relationship with their parents. In recent years, giving children digital devices to control their responses to emotions, especially if they’re negative, has ...

No evidence that England’s new ‘biodiversity boost’ planning policy will help birds or butterflies

No evidence that England’s new ‘biodiversity boost’ planning policy will help birds or butterflies
2024-06-28
A new legal requirement for developers to demonstrate a biodiversity boost in planning applications could make a more meaningful impact on nature recovery if improvements are made to the way nature’s value is calculated, say researchers at the University of Cambridge. From 2024, the UK’s Environment Act requires planning applications to demonstrate an overall biodiversity net gain of at least 10% as calculated using a new statutory biodiversity metric. The researchers trialled the metric by using it to calculate the biodiversity value of 24 sites across England. These sites have all been monitored over the long-term, allowing the team to compare biodiversity ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

NARO developed a novel method to analyze “forever chemicals” in the soil

Scientists pinpoint strategies that could stop cats from scratching your furniture

Offline/online attribute-based searchable encryption scheme from ideal lattices

Theoretical design and experimental verification of high-entropy carbide ablative resistant coating

Cultural adaptation of behavioral interventions in health promises more effective results for the population

New class of cancer mutations discovered in so-called ‘junk’ DNA

High ceilings linked to poorer exam results for uni students

Low-dose aspirin could help prevent pregnancy complications caused by flu infections

Splicing it all together in the fight against cancer

World’s first research journal dedicated to psychology and artificial intelligence announced

Zayed to lead new Division of Surgical Sciences

How dust pollution from shrinking Great Salt Lake affects communities disproportionately

Clever clothes! Seams in clothing capture body movement

AMS science preview: Maui wildfire, Salt Lake drying, traffic and weather

Research spotlight: Identifying genes to prolong an anti-tumor immune response

SRI is developing a new malaria treatment that aims to protect from the disease

UV radiation damage leads to ribosome roadblocks, causing early skin cell death

Precise and less expensive 3D printing of complex, high-resolution structures

AGS member, George Kuchel, appointed to serve on ACIP

Researchers awarded Department of Defense grant to study the role of gut microbiomes to improve outcomes in dystonia

Advancing toward a preventative HIV vaccine

A Global Heat Early Warning system is now essential, and requires planning in four key areas to overcome barriers and enable successful implementation, per new review

An alternative way to manipulate quantum states

Study reveals new factor associated with the risk of severe COVID-19 in people with obesity

Study finds that influential people can play a valuable role in getting people to act in the best interest of society 

Editorial: Genomics has more to reveal

COVID-19 pandemic tied to low birth weight for infants in India, study shows

Welch Foundation supports UTA’s drug delivery innovations

Treatment with a mixture of antimicrobial peptides can impede antibiotic resistance

The Mediterranean Diet is linked to lower risk of mortality in cancer survivors

[Press-News.org] Chemo drug may cause significant hearing loss in longtime cancer survivors
Study is the first to measure real-world hearing loss progression in cancer survivors over a long period of time