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Comparison of the Effectiveness of Monitoring Cisplatin-Induced Ototoxicity with Extended High-Frequency Pure-Tone Audiometry or Distortion-Product Otoacoustic Emission

Article information

Korean J Audiol. 2014;18(2):58-68
Publication date (electronic) : 2014 September 16
doi : https://doi.org/10.7874/kja.2014.18.2.58
1Department of Otolaryngology, Eulji Medical Center, Eulji University School of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.
2Department of Internal Medicine, Eulji Medical Center, Eulji University School of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.
Address for correspondence: Hyun Joon Shim, MD, PhD. Department of Otolaryngology, Eulji Medical Center, Eulji University School of Medicine, 68 Hangeulbiseok-ro, Nowon-gu, Seoul 139-872, Korea. Tel +82-2-970-8276, Fax +82-2-970-8275, eardoc11@naver.com
Received 2014 April 02; Revised 2014 July 01; Accepted 2014 July 10.

Abstract

Background and Objectives

To compare the effectiveness of monitoring cisplatin-induced ototoxicity in adult patients using extended high-frequency pure-tone audiometry (EHF-PTA) or distortion-product otoacoustic emission (DP-OAE) and to evaluate the concurrence of ototoxicity and nephrotoxicity in cisplatin-treated patients.

Subjects and Methods

EHF-PTA was measured at frequencies of 0.25, 0.5, 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 9, 11.2, 12.5, 14, 16, 18, and 20 kHz and DP-OAE at frequencies of 0.5, 0.75, 1, 1.5, 2, 3, 4, 6, and 8 kHz in cisplatin-treated patients (n=10). Baseline evaluations were made immediately before chemotherapy and additional tests were performed before each of six cycles of cisplatin treatment. Laboratory tests to monitor nephrotoxicity were included before every cycle of chemotherapy.

Results

Four of 10 patients showed threshold changes on EHF-PTA. Five of 10 patients showed reductions in DP-OAE, but one was a false-positive result. The results of EHF-PTA and DP-OAE were consistent in two patients. Only one patient displayed nephrotoxicity on laboratory tests after the third cycle.

Conclusions

In our study, the incidence rate of cisplatin-induced ototoxicity was 40% with EHF-PTA or DP-OAE. Although both EHF-PTA and DP-OAE showed the same sensitivity in detecting ototoxicity, they did not produce the same results in all patients. These two hearing tests could be used to complement one another. Clinicians should use both tests simultaneously in every cycle of chemotherapy to ensure the detection of ototoxicity.

Introduction

The first-generation platinum drug cisplatin is widely and frequently used for the treatment of various cancers. It is an effective drug against many kinds of cancer but also has many associated adverse effects, including ototoxicity, nausea, vomiting, nephrotoxicity, bone-marrow suppression, and hepatotoxicity.1) The ototoxicity of cisplatin is known to correlate with its cumulative dose. However, hearing loss (HL) after cisplatin treatment is difficult to predict based only on the cumulative dose because there is significant individual variability in susceptibility to ototoxicity.2) However, cisplatin-induced ototoxic damage is usually considered irreversible once it has occurred.3) These facts justify the mandatory monitoring of ototoxicity to ensure its early detection.

Ototoxic effects often first appear at frequencies >8 kHz. Numerous previous studies have demonstrated the value of extended high-frequency pure-tone audiometry (EHF-PTA) for the early detection of cisplatin-induced ototoxicity (Cis-OT), because Cis-OT begins in the most basal region of the cochlea.3) Distortion-product otoacoustic emission (DP-OAE) potentially reflects subclinical cochlear damage because DP-OAE amplitude reduction arises from outer-hair-cell damage, which occurs before inner-hair-cell damage. Some clinicians advocate the use of DP-OAE because this test is not affected by the patient's age or any deterioration in the patient's general condition caused by chemotherapy.

The first aim of our study was to investigate which of these tests is the more sensitive method for detecting Cis-OT. We performed both EHF-PTA and DP-OAE in every cisplatin-treated patient and compared the ototoxicity detection rates of the two tests. Our second aim was to assess the concurrence of ototoxicity and nephrotoxicity in cisplatin-treated patients. Serum blood urea nitrogen (BUN) and serum creatinine (Cr) levels and the glomerular filtration rate (GFR) were measured to detect nephrotoxic complications.

Subjects and Methods

This study was performed with the approval of the Institutional Review Board of Eulji General Hospital and all the participants gave their informed consent. A prospective study was carried out in 17 patients who were undergoing chemotherapy that included cisplatin from May 2011 to August 2013. Seven of these patients discontinued their follow-up voluntarily or dropped out of the study. The data for the 10 patients who completed the tests throughout all their cycles of chemotherapy were collected.

All 10 patients were diagnosed with cancer by pathological evaluation, including two with lung cancer, two with gastric cancer, four with gynecological malignancies, one with gall bladder cancer, and one with common bile duct cancer. Each patient received several (2-6) cycles of cisplatin and i.v. dose calculated from the body surface area of each patient. The hearing levels of the patients were evaluated with EHF-PTA and DP-OAE. The baseline evaluation was made immediately before chemotherapy commenced and additional tests were performed immediately before each cycle of cisplatin treatment, and one month after the end of treatment. None of our patients had received any ototoxic drug other than cisplatin.

EHF-PTA was measured at frequencies of 0.25, 0.5, 1, 2, 3, 4, 8, 9, 11.2, 12.5, 14, 16, 18, and 20 kHz using an AC40 clinical audiometer (Interacoustics, Assens, Denmark). All the patients were tested in both ears, and the pure-tone audiometric thresholds, in decibels hearing level (dB HL), were measured through air and bone conduction. The presence or absence of a change in the hearing threshold was based on published clinical guidelines [American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA) 1994] and included: 1) ≥20 dB change at any one test frequency; 2) ≥10 dB change at any two consecutive test frequencies; or 3) loss of response at three consecutive test frequencies at which responses were previously obtained (ASHA 1994).4)

Navigator PRO (Bio-logic Systems Corp., Mundelein, IL, USA) was used to assess DP-OAE. The sound stimulus for DP-OAE consisted of two simultaneous permanent pure tones at different frequencies (f1/f2 ratio=1.22) at 60 dB SPL (L1>L2), and DP-OAE was measured at eight different frequencies: 0.5, 0.75, 1, 1.5, 2, 3, 4, 6, and 8 kHz. Change in DP-OAE was defined as a reduction in the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) at f2 frequencies below 1 kHz, which is the difference between the amplitude of DP-OAE and the noise floor at each test f2 frequency. A reduction in SNR greater than 14 dB was regarded as significant. At f2 frequencies above 1 kHz, a reduction in SNR greater than 7 dB was considered a significant clinical change.5,6)

Serum BUN, serum Cr, and GFR were tested to monitor nephrotoxicity. Blood samples were taken immediately before each cycle of chemotherapy.

Statistical analyses were performed with the SPSS statistical software package (SPSS, version 15.0 for Windows; SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL, USA). The results of the blood tests before each cycle were compared using multivariate analysis of variance. The correlations between the cumulative dose of cisplatin and the risk factors for developing ototoxicity were calculated using Pearson's correlation analysis. Differences were considered statistically significant at a p value of <0.05.

Results

Six of the 10 study subjects were men and four were women. The mean age of the group was 58.7±10.3 years (range, 40-71 years). No child subject was included. The mean initial dose of cisplatin was 114.0±40.3 mg/m2 (range, 40-160 mg/m2) and the mean total infused dose was 610.0±286.6 mg/m2 (range, 80-960 mg/m2). Five patients received six cycles of chemotherapy, two of them received five cycles, another two received four cycles, and one of them received two cycles (mean, five cycles; range, 2-6 cycles)(Table 1). One patient (subject 10) had mixed-type HL on the right side and a ventilation tube was inserted before the study. No other patient complained of HL, tinnitus, or aural fullness before therapy. Four of the 10 patients [subjects 1, 3, 5, and 10 (left ear only), seven of 20 ears] revealed threshold changes on EHF-PTA (Table 2). Five ears showed threshold changes below 8 kHz (one ear at 3 kHz, two ears at 4 kHz, and another two ears at 8 kHz), and another two ears showed changes at frequencies over 9 kHz (one ear at 9 kHz and the other ear at 10 kHz). One patient (subject 10) with unilateral HL before treatment showed a threshold change at 8 kHz on the healthy side only. Three ears (subjects 1 and 10) showed threshold changes during chemotherapy and another four ears (subjects 3 and 5) showed threshold changes after therapy ceased (Table 1, Fig. 1). To assess the overall changes in the hearing thresholds after chemotherapy, we plotted the average thresholds for all 10 patients at each frequency. There were no statistical differences in the hearing thresholds before and after treatment for either ear at any frequency measured (Fig. 2).

Table 1

Summary of ototoxicity and nephrotoxicity after cisplatin-based chemotherapy

Table 2

Incidence of ototoxicity and nephrotoxicity after cisplatin-based chemotherapy

Fig. 1

Results of pre-treatment and post-treatment EHF-PTA and DP-OAE for patients with hearing impairment. Two left audiograms show pre-treatment and post-treatment EHF-PTA in both ears, and four right DP grams show pre-treatment and post-treatment DP-OAE of right and left ears. ↑lowest frequency that showed threshold change (kHz). *frequencies that showed DP-OAE value change (kHz). EHF-PTA: extended high-frequency pure-tone audiometry, DP-OAE: distortion-product otoacoustic emission, NF: noise floor.

Fig. 2

Average pure tone threshold changes in each measured frequencies after cisplatin-based chemotherapy (n=20 ears, right and left ears of 10 patients).

There was no significant correlation between the cumulative dose of cisplatin and the presence of hearing threshold changes on EHF-PTA (p>0.05). There was also no significant correlation between the cumulative dose and the lowest frequency that showed hearing impairment (p>0.05).

Five of the 10 patients (subjects 1, 3, 5, 8, and 10, eight of 20 ears) showed a reduction in DP-OAE, but one of the results (subject 8) was a false positive, in which the DP-OAE change only occurred at 2 kHz, whereas no change was detected with EHF-PTA. The DP-OAE results were consistent with the EHF-PTA results in two patients (subjects 1 and 3, four ears)(Table 1). Subject 5 showed bilateral HL on EHF-PTA, but the DP-OAE value only changed in the left ear. In contrast, the DP-OAE value changed on both sides in subject 10, but the threshold change on EHF-PTA was only significant in the left ear. The time of detection of HL was the same with both tests, except for subject 10, in which DP-OAE detected HL earlier than EHF-PTA. The sensitivity of EHF-PTA in detecting Cis-OT was 40% (four of 10 patients), as was the sensitivity of DP-OAE. DP-OAE showed a false positive rate of 10% (Table 2). Average DP-OAE changes in each measured frequencies after cisplatin-based chemotherapy were plotted in Fig. 3. None of the subjects complained of their newly developed hearing disturbance or any otological problem during or after chemotherapy.

Fig. 3

Average DP-OAE changes in each measured frequencies after cisplatin-based chemotherapy (n=20 ears, right and left ears of 10 patients). DP-NF: distortion product-noise field, DP-OAE: distortion-product otoacoustic emission.

Only one patient (subject 1) displayed nephrotoxicity according to the laboratory tests, which occurred after the third cycle of chemotherapy, simultaneous with a hearing threshold change. Both serum BUN and serum Cr were elevated and GFR was significantly reduced (p<0.05).

Discussion

In the otological context, cisplatin is one of the most ototoxic drugs known. An animal experiment showed that cisplatin causes outer-hair-cell damage from the basal turn.7) Initially, the first row of outer hair cells is affected, followed by the second and third rows, the inner hair cells, and finally the supporting cells. The progression of damage is typically from the high-frequency-coding cochlear base toward the apex.7,8,9,10,11)

In the present study, the incidence rate of Cis-OT was 40% (four of 10 patients) when detected with either EHF-PTA or DP-OAE. In subject 5, DP-OAE failed to detect HL on one side. In subject 10, EHF-PTA failed to detect HL in one ear that originally already showed hearing impairment. The time of HL detection was the same in five ears with both tests, but was detected earlier with DP-OAE in subject 10. However, DP-OAE generated one false positive result. Because this subject presented with a level of reduction at 2 kHz on DP-OAE only, although EHF-PTA detected no threshold change, it is reasonable to regard it as a false positive result. We could draw no conclusion from these data about which test is superior for the early detection of Cis-OT. The two tests seem to be mutually complementary. Therefore, clinicians should use both tests simultaneously in every cycle of chemotherapy to ensure the detection of ototoxicity. There are no standard criteria for defining changes in DP-OAE, and we used the criteria that have been used in many previous studies.5,6) ASHA suggested the clinical criterion that DP-OAE changes should show a level reduction ≥4 dB or that a loss of response at two adjacent f2 frequencies indicates a "reduction" on DP-OAE.4) However, when this criterion was applied in our study, only three of 20 ears (15%) met the criterion (left ear of subject 1, both ears of subject 3). This implies that the ASHA criterion is too strict for the early detection of ototoxicity.

The mean incidence of ototoxicity was 33% when patients received a single dose of 50 mg/m2 cisplatin.12) Coradini, et al.13) reported 52% bilateral HL in cisplatin-treated younger patients (median age, 12.3 years; median total dose of cisplatin, 406 mg/m2) using PTA, DP-OAE, and transient evoked otoacoustic emissions (TE-OAE). Another study using EHF-PTA detected HL in 42 of 55 ears (76.4%) after treatment.14) In the study of Eiamprapai, et al.,6) the incidence rate of ototoxicity detected with DP-OAE was 77.3% in adult patients after a cumulative dose of cisplatin of 156.1±77.17 mg/m2. Another study reported that the incidence of ototoxicity was 81.3% in children (eight months to 20 years old) after a cumulative dose of cisplatin of 428±106 mg/m2, when detected with EHF-PTA, DP-OAE, and auditory brainstem response.15) In the present study, all subjects received chemotherapy by own protocol of the department of oncology, and therapeutic doses of cisplatin were determined by the cell types of tumor and their body surfaces.

DP-OAE provides a noninvasive and objective measure of cochlear function, because DP-OAE is an acoustic response generated by the outer hair cells within the cochlea. In earlier studies published by Littman, et al.16) and Ress, et al.,17) DP-OAE was performed to determine the cochlear functional status after cisplatin treatment. Several studies reported that DP-OAE was a more sensitive monitoring tool for detecting drug-induced ototoxicity than conventional PTA or TE-OAE.18,19) However, in this study, we could find the value of EHF-PTA in the monitoring ototoxicity. For example, bilateral hearing losses were detected at the frequencies over 9 kHz of EHF-PTA in subject 1. Moreover, in subject 5, EHF-PTA detected ototoxicity in both ears whereas, DP-OAE failed to detect HL on either the two. Indeed, many previous studies have shown that EHF-PTA is a more sensitive tool for detecting ototoxicity than PTA at conventional frequencies, and have suggested that monitoring for ototoxicity must include a threshold evaluation of frequencies above 8 kHz.14,20,21)

However, few studies have compared the sensitivity of EHF-PTA and DP-OAE in monitoring Cis-OT. Reavis, et al.22) reported that the DP-OAE hit rate was 78% in ears with hearing impairment confirmed by EHF-PTA (0.5-20 kHz). However, a direct comparison between that study and the present study is difficult because they used another criterion to define a "reduction" in DP-OAE. In a study of 21 children receiving cisplatin, EHF-PTA detected changes earlier than DP-OAE in nine patients, whereas an early change was detected by DP-OAE in only one patient.15) In contrast, in the present study, DP-OAE detected a change in one ear earlier than EHF-PTA. The difficulty in measuring DP-OAE above 8 kHz seems to reduce its sensitivity in detecting ototoxicity. Nevertheless, DP-OAE is a potentially useful tool for monitoring child patients or handicapped people who cannot be evaluated with PTA. DP-OAE could also be used as an accessory tool to support the results of EHF-PTA.

Cisplatin can cause both ototoxicity and nephrotoxicity. The protein, kidney injury molecule 1, which is induced in the renal proximal tubular epithelium after cisplatin therapy, can also be expressed in the cochlea, and caused ototoxic effects in an animal study.23) Reports of the incidence of cisplatin-induced nephrotoxicity are relatively rare. An increase in the serum Cr concentration has been reported in 41% of patients treated with high doses of cisplatin (70-85 mg/m2 for each cycle, 5.3 mean cycles).24) And Máthé, et al.25) reported that 23 of 38 patients with lung cancer showed pathological increases in serum Cr after 2-4 cisplatin infusions (75 mg/m2) per cycle. From our result, we infer that the incidence of cisplatin-induced nephrotoxicity (10%) is lower than the incidence of ototoxicity (40%). However, close monitoring must be mandatory for nephrotoxicity, because its consequences are lethal.

The purpose of monitoring ototoxicity during cisplatin chemotherapy is the early detection of sensorineural hearing impairment before the patient is him/herself aware of it. If serious ototoxicity is detected, an alternative, less ototoxic drug, such as carboplatin, could be considered before ototoxicity progresses. The timing of the interruption of cisplatin should be considered based on various factors, including the amount of hearing deterioration, the hearing level before chemotherapy, the pathological type or grade of cancer, and the patient's age. However, to the best of our knowledge, there is no specific criterion for the discontinuation of cisplatin therapy. The critical dose of Cis-OT is still controversial. The average cumulative dose of cisplatin to cause a threshold change in EHF-PTA was reported to be 400 or 343.6 mg/m2 in two different studies.18,26) In one study using DP-OAE, the SNR amplitude decreased significantly when the patients received a cumulative dose of more than 200 mg/m2.6) In the present study, ototoxicity was detected with EHF-PTA and DP-OAE after a total cumulative dose of 780 mg/m2 in two subjects. Another subject displayed ototoxicity at a total cumulative dose of 480 mg/m2 and another at 240 mg/m2. The average cumulative dose of cisplatin during which ototoxicity developed was 570±261.53 mg/m2. However, three subjects who received a cumulative cisplatin dose >700 mg/m2 showed no change on either EHF-PTA or DP-OAE, implying that individual variability, such as genetic factors, affect the development of ototoxicity. In this study, there was no significant correlation between the cumulative dose of cisplatin and the presence of hearing threshold changes, which could be attributable to the small sample size. The four patients with HL after treatment showed threshold changes below 8 kHz, but none of them was aware of their hearing impairment during or after chemotherapy. This result justifies the monitoring of ototoxicity.

The limitation of this study was its small sample size. Only 10 patients completed all the scheduled follow-up evaluations. Because of the severity of the patients' existing disease, some died during the research period, and some showed very poor compliance with the hearing test. Patients who did not feel their hearing was impaired tended to ignore the importance of the follow-up hearing tests. For this reason, seven patients discontinued regular hearing tests during and after their treatment with cisplatin. For the future, the study with larger sample size will be necessary to clarify the effectiveness of EHF-PTA and DP-OAE for monitoring cisplatin-induced ototoxicity. Several investigators argued that both EHF-PTA and OAE are problematic in patients with HL, particularly in the elderly, because of the limited responses to test due to pre-existing losses of outer hair cells in the cochlear basal region.27,28,29,30) For the cases of elderly patients, the baseline testing prior to ototoxic drug administration will be mandatory for the precise interpretation using "change of value". Ress, et al.17) studied a greater number of patients including elderly subjects and DP-OAE showed effective sensitivity to detect ototoxicity. In the present study, all subjects performed EHF-PTA and DP-OAE before initial cisplatin infusion and the "change of value" after treatment were calculated.

As mentioned several times before, HL can occur without any subjective otological symptoms. It is also easy for oncologists to overlook the monitoring of hearing, because they consider the cancer therapy to be the most important issue. Detailed information about cisplatin-induced ototoxicity should be offered to patients and otologists should be involved in establishing a well-organized protocol for hearing tests for all cisplatin-treated patients.

Conclusion

In our study, the incidence rate of Cis-OT was 40% (four of 10 patients) when detected with either EHF-PTA or DP-OAE. Although both EHF-PTA and DP-OAE showed the same sensitivity in detecting ototoxicity, they did not produce coincident results in all cases. The two hearing tests complement one another, and clinicians should use both tests simultaneously in every cycle of chemotherapy to ensure the detection of ototoxicity. Cisplatin may induce nephrotoxicity less frequently than it induces ototoxicity.

Acknowledgments

This study was supported by Dong-A ST Co., Ltd, South Korea.

Cisplatin administered in this study was not related with Dong-A ST Co., Ltd.

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Article information Continued

Funded by : Dong-A ST Co., Ltd

Fig. 1

Results of pre-treatment and post-treatment EHF-PTA and DP-OAE for patients with hearing impairment. Two left audiograms show pre-treatment and post-treatment EHF-PTA in both ears, and four right DP grams show pre-treatment and post-treatment DP-OAE of right and left ears. ↑lowest frequency that showed threshold change (kHz). *frequencies that showed DP-OAE value change (kHz). EHF-PTA: extended high-frequency pure-tone audiometry, DP-OAE: distortion-product otoacoustic emission, NF: noise floor.

Fig. 2

Average pure tone threshold changes in each measured frequencies after cisplatin-based chemotherapy (n=20 ears, right and left ears of 10 patients).

Fig. 3

Average DP-OAE changes in each measured frequencies after cisplatin-based chemotherapy (n=20 ears, right and left ears of 10 patients). DP-NF: distortion product-noise field, DP-OAE: distortion-product otoacoustic emission.

Table 1

Summary of ototoxicity and nephrotoxicity after cisplatin-based chemotherapy

Table 1

*false positive result, subject 10 already had unilateral hearing loss on her right side. PTA: pure-tone audiometry, DP-OAE: distortion-product otoacoustic emission

Table 2

Incidence of ototoxicity and nephrotoxicity after cisplatin-based chemotherapy

Table 2

*one ear showing a false-positive DP-OAE result was excluded. PTA: pure-tone audiometry, DP-OAE: distortion-product otoacoustic emission, BUN: blood urea nitrogen, Cr: creatinine, GFR: glomerular filtration rate