| Literature DB >> 29388595 |
Ivette Cejas1, Michael F Hoffman2, Alexandra L Quittner2.
Abstract
The number of children with hearing loss with additional disabilities receiving cochlear implantation has increased dramatically over the past decade. However, little is known about their auditory and speech and language development following implantation. The purpose of this review is to evaluate the effects of cochlear implantation on the most common genetic and developmental disorders in children with hearing loss. Benefits of cochlear implantation for children with autism spectrum disorder, developmental delay, CHARGE syndrome, cerebral palsy, learning disorders, Usher syndrome, Waardenburg syndrome, and attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder are reviewed. Our review indicates that children with hearing loss and additional disabilities benefit from cochlear implantation, especially when implanted early. Thus, early interventions seem as important for these children as for deaf children without additional disabilities. Comparisons of outcomes across these disabilities indicate that children with little to no cognitive impairment (eg, Waardenburg sydrome, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder) have better outcomes than those with greater deficits in intellectual functioning (eg, autism, CHARGE syndrome). In addition, parents of children with hearing loss and additional disabilities report higher levels of parenting stress and greater child behavior problems than those without comorbid diagnoses. However, these parents are as sensitive when interacting with their children as parents with typically developing children using cochlear implantation. Given these results, it is critical to evaluate these children's developmental milestones to provide early implantation and intervention, appropriately counsel families regarding realistic expectations for the implant, and facilitate family adaptation.Entities:
Keywords: auditory skills; childhood deafness; cochlear implantation; comorbid disorders; outcomes; speech and language development
Year: 2015 PMID: 29388595 PMCID: PMC5683271 DOI: 10.2147/PHMT.S65797
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatric Health Med Ther ISSN: 1179-9927
Prevalence data for common comorbid disorders with hearing loss
| Comorbid condition | Prevalence of disorder in all children | Sex differences | Prevalence of hearing loss | Prevalence of an additional disability in children with hearing loss |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Autism spectrum disorder | One per 68 | 5:1 male to female ratio | 1%–6% have some degree of sensorineural hearing loss | 4% |
| Developmental delay | One per 6 | 1.3 male to female ratio | 10.2% have some degree of sensorineural hearing loss | 8.8% |
| CHARGE syndrome | One per 9–10,000 | Equal sex representation | 34%–38% have severe to profound hearing loss, | NR |
| Cerebral palsy | One per 323 | 1.3: male to female ratio | 12%–25% have some degree of sensorineural hearing loss | NR |
| Learning disorder | 50–150 per 1,000 | 2–3:1 male to female ratio | NR | 7.20% |
| Usher syndrome | 10 per 100,000 | Equal sex representation | 100% have some hearing loss | 3%–6% |
| Waardenburg syndrome | One per 42,000 | Equal sex representation | 35%–78% of children with WS I and 55%–91% of children with WS II | 2%–5% |
| ADHD | 50 per 1,000 | 2:1 male to female ratio | NR | 5.4% |
Abbreviations: NR, not reported; ADHD, attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder; WS, Waardenburg syndrome.
Figure 1Various disabilities discussed in this paper placed on a continuum from minimal potential benefit to maximum potential benefit based on a review of the literature.
Abbreviations: ADHD, attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder; CI, cochlear implant; CP, cerebral palsy; DD, developmental delay.
Studies in children with cochlear implantation and additional disabilities
| Reference | Date | Sample (n) | Mean age at CI (months) | Mean length of CI use (months) | Outcome measures | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hayman and Franck | 2005 | 2 | Child 1, 12 months; child 2, 135 months | Child 1, 30 months; child 2, N/A | ESP, MLNT | Child 1 had increased social/emotional responsiveness and nonverbal communication |
| Robertson | 2013 | 10 | 51 (SD 41) | N/A | CAPS, SIR | 6 of 10 children used their CI consistently |
| Beers et al | 2014 | Literature review | N/A | N/A | N/A | Children with ASD and CIs displayed improved social communication, behavioral and environmental awareness, increased vocalizations, eye contact, and reaction to music after implantation |
| Meinzein-Derr et al | 2014 | 14; 10 hearing aid controls | 33.6 (SD 21.4) | N/A | PLS-4, CELF | 4 children with ASD achieved oral communication skills postimplantation |
| Donaldson et al | 2004 | 7 | 63.4 (SD 31.5) | 25 | MAIS, IT-MAIS, GASP-W, GASP-S, PPVT-III, EVT, CDI | Children with ASD experienced increases in vocalization, eye contact, use of sign language, reaction to sound, and response to requests following implantation |
| Fitzpatrick et al | 2014 | 17 | N/A | N/A | Retrospective chart review | Higher prevalence of hearing loss in children with ASD than in general population |
| Fukuda et al | 2003 | 1 | 56 (SD N/A) | Assessed at 6, 9, 12, 15, and 24 | KSPD, Type 67 Test Battery | The child achieved monosyllable speech ability and audiometric results similar to children without ADs |
| Holt and Kirk | 2005 | 19; 50 CI controls | DD 37.7 (SD 14.6); non-DD 28.84 (SD 13.2) | 12 | IT-MAIS, GAEL-P, Mr Potato Head Task; PSI, PPVT-III, RDLS | Children with and without DD had significant improvements in speech and language |
| Edwards et al | 2006 | 11; 21 CI controls | 28 (SD N/A) | 24 | SIR, IT-MAIS, E2L | Children with DD were delayed in speech perception or speech production Children with mild DD made progress in areas of speech perception and speech intelligibility 1–2 years postimplantation |
| Meinzen-Derr et al | 2011 | 15; 15 DD controls | 21 (SD N/A) | 12 | PLS-4 | Children with ADs had significantly lower receptive and expressive language quotients than children without ADs |
| Amirsalari et al | 2012 | 28: 234 CI controls | N/A | 24 | CAP, SIR | No significant differences were found between children with motor DD and children without motor DD in CAP and SIR |
| Eze et al | 2013 | Literature review | N/A | N/A | N/A | Children with mild DD had comparable outcomes to children with without DD |
| Hiraumi et al | 2013 | 11; 24 CI controls | 37 (SD N/A) | 24 | CV, PPT | Preoperative DD negatively affected postimplant speech perception outcomes |
| Wakil et al | 2014 | 21 | 56.4 (SD 2.9) | 135.6 | IT-MAIS, ESP, GASP, PBK, HINT | Severe DD, limited improvement from CI, although some level of basic auditory skills (sound awareness, association of meaning with sounds, and vocalization behavior) developed from CI use; mild/moderate DD, developed open-set speech recognition; suggests level of DD has impact on effect of CI |
| Bauer et al | 2002 | 6; 5 CI controls | 70 (SD 40) | 36 | ESP, GASP, IT-MAIS | 3 of the 5 children demonstrated improved speech perception |
| MacArdle et al | 2002 | 4 | 76.3 (SD 35.7) | 48 | LSQ-E, MPT, MJWL, SIR | All children showed improvement in receptive language scores postimplantation |
| Au et al | 2004 | 1 | 30 (SD N/A) | Assessed at 12, 24, 36, and 48 months | RDLS-Cantonese version | Speech perception gradually improved after implantation |
| Buchman et al | 2004 | 28 | 66 (SD 59) | 29 | ESP, PBK | Children with inner ear malformations were slower to develop speech perception than children without malformations |
| Lanson et al | 2007 | 10 | 26.4 (SD 10.8) | 43.6 | IT-MAIS, 9 children tested | All children showed improvements on the IT-MAIS postimplant |
| Southwell et al | 2010 | 3 | Child 1, 17 years; child 2, 48 months; child 3, 36 months | 6.3 | HINT-C | All children reported significant improvements in hearing skills following implantation |
| Ahn and Lee | 2013 | 6 | 58 (SD 40) | 58.4 | IT-MAIS, CAP, SIR | Language and speech improved in 5/6 children over time Children with CHARGE syndrome showed varying but steady improvement in auditory performance |
| Cardoso et al | 2013 | 1 | 52 | 41 | IT-MAIS, MUSS | The child reached highest category of auditory perception |
| Ricci et al | 2014 | 5 | 37 (SD 16) | 29 | ESP, IT-MAIS | 2 children used oral language as the sole mean of communication; one child started using oral language as main mode of communication 2 children did not develop linguistic abilities |
| Bacciu et al | 2009 | 5 | 91.6 (SD 24.3) | 28.2 | ESP, GASP, SIR | All children achieved improved SIR scores 1 year after CI |
| Steven et al | 2011 | 36 | 42.6 (SD 23.2) | 55.2 | SRS | The degree of cognitive impairment was a strong predictor of outcomes postimplantation |
| Byun et al | 2013 | 8; 8 CI controls | 21.6 (SD 5.3) | 24 | CAP, K-Ling, SELSI | 4 children with CP had speech and language outcomes comparable with age-matched and sex-matched peers 4 children with severe CP did not produce meaningful speech by 24 months |
| Issacson et al | 1996 | 5; 5 CI controls | LD 64.2 (SD 17.4); non-LD 62 (SD 18.4) | 6, 12, 18, 24, and 34 months | DAT, MTS, SERT, WIPI, GASP, MAC, CID, Iowa Medial Vowel and Medial Consonant Tests, NU No 6, PPVT, K-ABC | Children with LD showed speech and language benefits from CI, but their progress was slower and more inconsistent |
| Hinderink et al | 1994 | 4 | USH 249 (SD 76.2); no-USH 258.6 (SD 101.3) | 24 | MST, AN, Gestel-Nijmegen Implant Questionnaire | All children demonstrated improvements in speech perception and pattern recognition |
| Jenison et al | 1995 | 2 | N/A | 36 | ESP, NU-CHIPS, GASP | Both children use their CIs full-time and have shown improvement in speech perception skills |
| Damen et al | 2006 | 7; 2 USH controls | 75.6 (SD 28.8) | 110 | NCIQ, SF12, EHL | Children demonstrated increased speech perception abilities after implantation |
| Liu et al | 2008 | 9 | 64.8 (SD 37.2) | 24 | IT-MAIS, ESP, NU-CHIP, MLNT, LNT, PBK, CAP, QACIU | Children with USH type 1 exhibited improvement in speech and auditory perception |
| Henricson et al | 2012 | 7; 33 CI controls; 43 hearing aid controls; 120 normal hearing controls | 13 (SD 14) | 110 | VMPT, NWD, PR, PI, SDM, WM, Word Spotting | Children with USH type 1 performed similarly to the control group on cognitive tests, but demonstrated poorer phonologic working memory |
| Jatana et al | 2013 | 26 | 39.6 (SD 37.2) | 93.6 | ESP, MLNT, LNT, PBK, CNC, HINT | The majority of children with USH achieved some level of open-set speech perception |
| Sugii et al | 2000 | 1 | 48 (SD N/A) | 24 | Ling Sound Test; Open-set word testing | The child achieved 58% on open-set word testing with auditory cues 2 years postimplantation |
| Daneshi et al | 2005 | 6 | 79 (SD 54.1) | 42.8 | PAPT/HI, Persian Spondee words test; CAP, SIR | Children with WS demonstrated significant improvement in speech perception and speech intelligibility All children eventually transferred to regular educational settings |
| Migirov et al | 2005 | 5 | 58.1 (SD 73.2) | 52.8 | ESP, IT-MAIS | 4 children with WS achieved open-set recognition of monosyllabic words, and all 5 children achieved open-set recognition of 2-syllable words |
| Cullen et al | 2006 | 6 | 37 (SD 20) | 69 | ESP, PBK | All children achieved some degree of closed-set and open-set speech Overall, children with WS performed extremely well following implantation |
| Pau et al | 2006 | 13 | N/A | 12 | Melbourne Speech Perception Categories | 4 children had EABR and lower speech perception scores than the other patients with normal EABR; children were diagnosed with auditory neuropathy |
| Deka et al | 2010 | 4 | 63.9 (SD 52) | 12 | CAP, MAIS, SIR | WS group achieved postimplant scores comparable to children without WS |
| Kontorinis et al | 2011 | 25 | 70.8 (SD 61.2) | 99.6 | HSM sentence test, FMT, CAP | 9 of 25 patients achieved monosyllabic scores better than 80% |
| Amirsalari et al | 2012 | 6; 75 CI controls | 26 (SD 15.8) | 12 | CAP, SIR | Children with WS showed significant improvement postimplantation on CAP and SIR |
| De Sousa Andrade et al | 2012 | 7; 261 CI controls | 30.6 (SD 9.7) | 57.7 | IT-MAIS, CAP, MUSS, SIR | Speech perception skills slightly worse in children with WS versus children without WS |
| Pundir et al | 2007 | 2 | Child 1, 72 months; child 2, 84 months | 9 | ISLD | Both cases improved after medication was used to address ADHD-related issues |
| Moreno Torres et al | 2010 | 1 | 18 (SD N/A) | Dec-60 | LAQ, TNI-2, PPVT-III | After 5 years of implant use, the child scored at the mean for children of the same auditory age on expressive and receptive language tests |
| Hamzavi et al | 2000 | 10 | 47.2 (SD 19.3) | 1, 3, 6, 12, 18, 24, and 36 months | EARS, MTP | 9 of 10 children showed significant improvement in their ability to make speech sounds |
| Pyman et al | 2000 | 20; 55 CI controls | 38.4 (SD 14.4) | 12 | Classification of Performance Levels | Children with DD developed closed set speech perception and open-set speech perception with the aid of lip-reading |
| Waltzman et al | 2000 | 29 | 50.4 (SD 30) | 28.8 | ESP, NU-CHIPS, GASP, PBK, MLNT, LNT, Common Phrases sentence test | Children with DD benefited from CI, but the development of auditory and linguistic skills was slower and less stable than children without ADs 59% of the children with ADs used oral communication postimplant |
| Rajput et al | 2003 | 85; 21 CI controls | 48 (SD 20.4) | N/A | RLIM, SIR | Children with syndromal disease had lower receptive language and speech intelligibility scores than other disability groups postimplant |
| Dettman et al | 2004 | 22; 27 CI controls | DD 29.1; non-DD 26.4 (SD N/A) | 37.3 | PVT, PBK, CNC, BKB | Children with severe DD had poorer speech perception than those with no DD or mild DD |
| Filipo et al | 2004 | 18 | 76.8 (SD 3.1) | 34.7 | Listening Progress Profile; Test Abilita Percettive; Test Identificazione Parole Infantili; Bi-Trochee-Polysyllabic word test; Test Abilita Uditive Varese; Common Protocol; Erber’s categories | All children showed improved listening and communication skills following implantation |
| Wiley et al | 2005 | 16 | 58.8 (SD 56.4) | 56.4 | Open-ended and close-ended questions | All children had greater awareness of environmental sounds, made progress in speech, and were more attentive following implantation |
| Wiley et al | 2006 | 45 | GJB2+ 23 (SD N/A); GJB2–26 (SD N/A); GJB2 NT 55 (SD N/A) | 33.5 | N/A | 62% of GJB2+ children were oral communicators; 67% of GJB2–children were oral communicators; 38% of GJB2 children were oral communicators |
| Daneshi and Hasanzadeh | 2007 | 60 | 68 (SD 32.2) | 12 | Revised Leiter International Performance Scale, PAPT/HI | Auditory perception improved in all disability groups |
| Edwards et al | 2007 | Literature review | N/A | N/A | N/A | Children with ADs, especially a mild cognitive delay, experienced numerous benefits with CI, but those with more severe disabilities showed slower rate of progress |
| Berrettni et al | 2008 | 23 | 75 (SD 52) | 30 | PCAP, TIPI 1, TIPI 2 | Following implantation, 53% of children attained the highest category of speech perception |
| Nikolopoulos et al | 2008 | 67; 108 CI controls | ADs 40.8 (SD N/A); No ADs 39.6 (SD N/A) | 60 | SIR | Children with DD had similar performance on measures of speech intelligibility |
| Wiley et al | 2008 | 14; 21 CI controls | ADs 17; No ADs 16 | 12 | ASC | Children with DD achieved the same rate of auditory skills as children without DD |
| Meinzen-Derr et al | 2010 | 20 | 24 (SD N/A) | 28 | PLS-4, RI-TLS | Nonverbal cognition, duration with CI, age at hearing loss diagnosis, and number of different therapies were related to post-CI language skills |
| Beer et al | 2012 | 23; 23 CI controls | 24 (SD 10) | 12 | IT-MAIS, PLS-4, Vineland-II | Children with ADs made progress in functional auditory skills within 1 year of implant use |
| Birman et al | 2012 | 29; 65 CI controls | N/A | 12 | CAP | Children with ADs had slower progress and poorer results than those without ADs |
| Cruz et al | 2012 | 157; 31 CI controls | 30.1 (SD 15.1) | Assessed at 12, 24, and 36 months | RDLS | Children with ADs have slower rate of growth in oral language than those without ADs; slowest progress was for children with autism Some children with ADs had increases in externalizing behaviors compared with the control group |
| Wiley et al | 2012 | 6 | 41.7 (SD 45.8) | 12 | PLS-4 | Children with ADs demonstrated improvement in spoken language |
| Broomfield et al | 2013 | 38 | 39 (SD N/A) | 115.5 | BKB, SRS | At follow-up, 82% of children were using their CI full time |
| Cupples et al | 2013 | 34; 85 hearing aid controls | 17.5 (SD 7.5) | >10 | PLS-4, PPVT-4, DEAP, CDI, PEACH, SIR | Children with ASD, CP, and/or DD had lower receptive and expressive language than those without DD. All children showed improvements in auditory performance after implantation |
| Janeschik et al | 2013 | 115; 148 CI controls | 62.1 (SD N/A) | 65.4 | Mainzer and Gottinger Test for Speech Comprehension in Childhood | Children with syndromal diseases performed significantly worse on all audiologic tests when compared with children with other etiologies |
Abbreviations: ESP, Early Speech Perception test; MLNT, Multisyllabic Lexical Neighborhood Test; CAP, Categories of Auditory Performance; SIR, Speech Intelligibility Rating; PLS-4, Preschool Language Scales, Fourth Edition; CELF, Clinical Evaluation of Language Fundamentals; MAIS, Meaningful Auditory Integration Scale; IT-MAIS, Infant-Toddler-MAIS; GASP-W, Glendonald Auditory Screening Procedure for Words; GASP-S, Glendonald Auditory Screening Procedure for Sentences; PPVT-III, Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test; EVT, Expressive Vocabulary Test; CDI, MacArthur-Bates Communicative Development Inventory; KSPD, Kyoto Scale for Psychological Development; GAEL-P, Grammatical Analysis of Elicited Language Pre-Sentence Level Test; PSI, Pediatric Speech Intelligibility Test; RDLS, Reynell Developmental Language Scales; CV, Consonant-Vowel Syllable Perception Test; PPT, Phrase Perception Test; PBK, Phonetically Balanced Monosyllabic Word List -Kindergarten; HINT, Hearing in Noise Test; E2L, E2L Toy Test; LSQ-E, Listening Skills Questionnaire-Environmental sounds; MPT, Manchester Picture Test; MJWL, Manchester Junior Word Lists; HINT-C, Hearing-in-Noise Test; MUSS; Meaningful Use of Speech Scale; SRS, Modified Speech Reception Score; K-Ling, Korean Version of the Ling’s Stage; SELSI, Sequenced Language Scale for Infants; DAT, Discrimination After Training; MST, Monosyllable, Trochee, Spondee Word and Stress Test; SERT, Sound Effects Recognition Test; WIPI, Word Intelligibility by Picture Identification Lists; MAC, Minimal Auditory Capability Battery; CID, Central Institute for the Deaf Everyday Sentences; NU No 6, Iowa Medial Vowel and Medial Consonant Tests; Northwestern University Auditory Test No 6; K-ABC, Kaufman Assessment Battery for Children; AN, Antwerp-Nijmegen Test Battery; NU-CHIPS, Northwestern University Children’s Perception of Speech; NCIQ, Nijmegen Cochlear Implant Questionnaire; SF12, Standard Medical Outcome Study Short-Form 12; EHL, Equivalent HL; LNT, Lexical Neighborhood Test; QACIU, Assessment of Cochlear Implant Use; VMPT, Visual Matrix Pattern Test; NWD, Nonword Discrimination; PR, Phonological Representations; PI, Phoneme Identification; SDM, Semantic Decision Making; WM, Word Mobilization; CNC, Consonant-Nucleus-Consonant words test; PAPT/HI, Persian Auditory Perception Test for the Hearing Impaired; FMT, Freiburg Monosyllabic Test; ISLD, Integrated Scales of Language Development; LAQ, LittlEars Auditory Questionnaire; TNI-2, Test of Nonverbal Intelligence-2; EARS, Evaluation of Auditory Response to Speech; MTP, Monosyllable Trochee Polysyllable Test; RLIM, Receptive Language Improvement score; PVT, Picture Vocabulary Test; BKB, Bamford-Kowal-Bench; PCAP, First Speech Perception Categories; TIPI 1, Test of Identification of Words for Children 1; TIPI 2, Test of Identification of Words for Children 2; ASC, Auditory Skills Checklist; RI-TLS, Rossetti Infant-Toddler Language Scale; Vineland-II, Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scale, Second Edition; DEAP, Diagnostic Evaluation of Articulation and Phonology; CDI, Child Development Inventory; PEACH, Parent Evaluation of Aural/Oral Performance of Children; EABR, electric auditory brainstem response; ADs, additional difficulties; CI, cochlear implant; N/A, not available; SD, standard deviation; ASD, autism spectrum disorder; DD, developmental delay; CP, cerebral palsy; LD, learning difficulty; USH, Usher syndrome; ADHD, attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder; WS, Waardenburg syndrome.