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Link Between Newborn
Infection and Childhood Hearing Loss?
NIDCD-funded Reseachers to Lead a Multicenter Study
October 5, 2005
The National Institute on Deafness and
Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD), one of the National Institutes of
Health (NIH), has awarded a $15 million contract to the University of
Alabama School of Medicine, Birmingham, to lead a multicenter study on
the role of congenital—acquired at birth—cytomegalovirus infection (CMV)
in the development of hearing loss in children. In one of the largest
studies of its kind, 100,000 children will be screened at birth for CMV
infection. Those who test positive for CMV will undergo hearing
screening to determine the onset, severity, and progression of hearing
loss.
University Hospital at University of Alabama
Although a majority of infants born in the United States are already
screened for hearing loss, most infants are not tested for CMV unless
they already show signs of the disease. Also, newborn hearing screening
cannot detect or predict hearing loss that will occur later in
childhood. While the causes of childhood hearing loss remain largely
unknown, estimates indicate that as much as 20 to 30 percent of
childhood hearing loss is caused by CMV infection.
CMV, a member of the herpes family, is the most common infection passed
from a mother to her unborn child. Approximately one percent of
newborns, or about 40,000 infants each year, are born infected with CMV.
Children born with CMV infection who have symptoms of infection, such as
hearing loss, seizures, visual impairment, and cerebral palsy, are
usually identified at birth and receive appropriate medical care.
However, the majority of CMV-infected children—roughly 90 percent—have
no symptoms at birth. These children have what is called a “silent”
infection, which often goes unnoticed. About 10 percent are at risk for
eventually developing hearing loss—the most common outcome of CMV
infection. Identifying asymptomatic children and following their
progress to determine if hearing loss develops is a major focus of this
research.
In this study, newborns at seven institutions* around the country will
be screened for CMV infection at birth, in addition to receiving newborn
hearing screening. Most of the newborns will be enrolled for screening
and follow-up evaluation beginning in about a year.
The researchers will analyze the data to better understand the
relationship between CMV infection and hearing loss and to determine the
extent to which CMV screening together with hearing screening can
improve the detection and prediction of permanent hearing loss in
children.
The University of Alabama at Birmingham, AL, is coordinating the
research for this contract.
*Other participating institutions are: University of Mississippi,
Jackson, MS; Carolinas Medical Center, Charlotte, NC; St. Peter’s
University Medical Center, New Brunswick, NJ; University of Cincinnati,
Cincinnati Children’s Medical Center; University of Pittsburgh,
Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh; and the University of Texas,
Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX.
For more information on this study, please contact the NIDCD’s Office of
Health Communication and Public Liaison at 301-496-7243. |