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Clinical Trials/NCT06100393
NCT06100393
Recruiting
Not Applicable

A Feasibility, Prospective, Repeated-measures Investigation of Hearing Outcomes With New Pre-processing Speech Enhancement Algorithms Compared to Standard-of-care Algorithms in Adult Cochlear Implant Recipients: a Master Umbrella Investigation

Cochlear2 sites in 1 country150 target enrollmentFebruary 22, 2024
ConditionsHearing Loss

Overview

Phase
Not Applicable
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Hearing Loss
Sponsor
Cochlear
Enrollment
150
Locations
2
Primary Endpoint
Australian Sentence Test in Noise (AuSTIN)
Status
Recruiting
Last Updated
4 months ago

Overview

Brief Summary

The purpose of this clinical investigation is to develop pre-processing strategies to enhance speech and reduce noise for CI listeners. The Master Umbrella Clinical Investigation will be comprised of several sub-investigations, which will aim to optimize speech enhancement algorithms, to improve real-world functionality, and to incorporate them efficiently into CI speech processors.

Detailed Description

This is a feasibility, prospective, multi-center, single-subject, repeated-measures clinical investigation in experienced adult cochlear implant users. The Master Umbrella design will enable the execution of a series of sub-investigations in the same user population, with the goal to evaluate a range of speech enhancement pre-processing algorithms in separate sub-investigations. The primary objectives for each sub-investigation will be consistent with the master umbrella investigation, with secondary and exploratory objectives selected based on the algorithm to be investigated. Secondary and exploratory objectives will be described in the sub-investigation documentation.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
February 22, 2024
End Date
October 31, 2026
Last Updated
4 months ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
All

Investigators

Sponsor
Cochlear
Responsible Party
Sponsor

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • User of an approved Nucleus cochlear implant.
  • User of the ACE (Advanced Combination Encoder) sound processing strategy.
  • Aged 18 years or older (no upper age limit).
  • Able to score 20% or more at +10 dB SNR or have an adaptive Speech Recognition Threshold (SRT) of 12 dB or less CI alone on a sentence in babble test.\*
  • Fluent speaker in the language used to assess speech perception performance, as determined by the investigator.
  • Willing and able to provide written informed consent.
  • ≥3 months post cochlear implant activation

Exclusion Criteria

  • Unable or unwilling to comply with the requirements of the clinical investigation as determined by the Investigator.
  • Additional health factors, known to the investigator, that would prevent or restrict participation in the audiological evaluations.
  • Investigator site personnel directly affiliated with this study and/or the investigator's immediate families; immediate family is defined as a spouse, parent, child, or sibling.
  • Cochlear employees or employees of Contract Research Organizations or contractors engaged by Cochlear for the purposes of this investigation.
  • Current participation, or participation in another interventional clinical study/trial in the past 30 days, involving an investigational drug or device (unless the other investigation was/is a Cochlear sponsored investigation and determined by the investigator or Sponsor to not impact this investigation).

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Australian Sentence Test in Noise (AuSTIN)

Time Frame: 1 day - Immediately post-screening

To determine whether the research algorithm provides non-inferior performance to the standard-of-care algorithm for sentences in noise using an adaptive sentence test in noise scores. Scoring: AuSTIN is scored as a Speech Reception Threshold (SRT), which reflects the volume of speech signal (in decibels, dB) relative to the background noise required for the subject to achieve 50% correct. For example, a score of 2dB SRT means the subject requires the speech to be 2dB louder than the background noise in order to correctly identify 50% of the target sentence. Range: -30dB to +30dB. Lower scores reflect a better outcome.

Study Sites (2)

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