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Brief Title: Screening for Hearing Loss After Childhood Cancer
Official Title: Improving Access to Screening for Hearing Loss After Childhood Cancer - a Novel Community-based Approach
Study ID: NCT06036407
Brief Summary: The HEAR-study pilots and evaluates a national, low-threshold screening program to detect hearing problems in Swiss adult childhood cancer survivors. Participants will conduct a hearing test in a local hearing aid shop and report about their experiences at the shop in questionnaires and interviews. The screening program will be evaluated using the RE-AIM framework.
Detailed Description: Hearing loss is an adverse event in childhood cancer survivors (CCS). It is caused by ototoxic cancer treatments, in particular platinum chemotherapy, cranial radiation with doses of ≥30 Gray, and surgery involving the auditory system. Undetected hearing loss, even if mild, can have a strong impact on life. It affects language acquisition in infants, school performance and communication, thus interfering with survivors' professional life, social integration, and quality of life. Although hearing loss is irreversible in most CCS, it can be treated with speech therapy or hearing aids; therefore, early detection is important. Unfortunately, one third of CCS in Switzerland with ototoxic treatment did not get auditory follow-up screening after completion of acute cancer treatment. CCS in follow-up care are often discharged to primary care, particularly for late effects that are not life threatening such as hearing loss. Multidisciplinary follow-up clinics for adult CCS were recently initiated in Switzerland. These provide risk-adapted individual examinations and counseling for CCS by organizing several medical examinations within one or two days, but capacity is limited. Additionally, extended visits in large hospitals are costly for the healthcare system and time-consuming for CCS. Low-threshold screening programs that are easily accessible and less time-consuming might therefore be a valuable addition to improve screening for hearing loss among CCS. The main rationale for this study is to test a novel community-based, low-threshold screening approach for hearing loss in CCS in Switzerland. The screening program is tested and evaluated using the RE-AIM (reach, effectiveness, adoption, implementation, maintenance) framework for assessing health interventions including reach, effectiveness, adoption, implementation and maintenance (see outcome measures). The second aim is to use the data obtained to close knowledge gaps on risk factors of ototoxicity after childhood cancer. This will eventually lead to improved care and higher quality of life for affected CCS.
Minimum Age: 18 Years
Eligible Ages: ADULT, OLDER_ADULT
Sex: ALL
Healthy Volunteers: No
Institute for Social and Preventive Medicine, Bern, , Switzerland
Name: Claudia Kuehni, MD
Affiliation: Institute of Social and Preventive Medicine, University of Bern
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR