1. A Systematic Review of Surgical Characteristics and Adverse Events of an Active, Transcutaneous Bone Conduction Device.
- Author
-
Jukic, Alma, Munhall, Christopher C., and Stevens, Shawn M.
- Subjects
- *
BONE conduction , *CONDUCTIVE hearing loss , *HEARING aids , *CINAHL database , *SENSORINEURAL hearing loss , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *HEMATOMA , *AUDIOMETRY , *SURGICAL complications , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *MEDLINE , *MEDICAL databases , *HEARING disorders , *ONLINE information services , *SURGICAL site infections , *SPEECH perception , *EAR surgery - Abstract
Objective: A new, active transcutaneous bone conduction device (BCD) was FDA-approved in 2019 in the USA. This systematic review sought to evaluate early outcomes associated with Osia implantation. Methods: A systematic review was conducted according to Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses (PRISMA) guidelines. Four databases were reviewed: PubMed, Scopus, Cochrane CENTRAL, and CINAHL. Studies were included if they described audiometric, surgical characteristics/complications, or adverse events associated with the Osia BCD. Exclusion criteria: non-English language studies, animal investigations, reviews/meta-analyses, case reports, database studies. Results: Eighteen studies with 336 patients were included. Mean age at implantation was 37.9 years. About 79.5% of patients had MHL/CHL and 19.5% had SSD/SHL. Mean operative time was 71.6 minutes. Mean PTA gain from unaided conditions was 35.4 dB. Mean functional gain at high frequency (6 kHz and above) from aided conditions was 16.1 dB. Mean improvement in speech recognition thresholds was 19.1 dB from unaided conditions. Adverse events (all types) were reported in 20.1% of cases. Across all studies, the postoperative infection rate was 5%. About 2% of patients reported magnet retention issues. About 1.65% of cases were complicated by hematomas. Conclusions: Under systematic literature review, the Osia BCD has been associated with low complication rates, relatively short operative times, and good audiometric and speech outcomes, notably high frequency gain >6 kHz. More advanced audiometric outcome reporting remains limited and audiometric data and patient reported outcome measures were reported heterogeneously. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF