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Bone-anchored hearing aids for people who are bilaterally deaf: a systematic review and economic evaluation

Bone-anchored hearing aids for people who are bilaterally deaf: a systematic review and economic evaluation
Bone-anchored hearing aids for people who are bilaterally deaf: a systematic review and economic evaluation
The aim of this systematic review, using standard methodology,was to assess the clinical and cost-effectiveness of bone-anchored hearing aids (BAHAs) for people who are bilaterally deaf. Prospective studies comparing BAHAs versus conventional hearing aids [air conduction hearing aid (ACHA) or bone conduction hearing aid (BCHA)], unaided hearing or ear surgery; and unilateral versus bilateral BAHAs were eligible. Twelve clinical effectiveness studies were included. No eligible comparisons with ear surgery were identified. Overall quality was rated as weak for all included studies.

There appeared to be some audiological benefits of BAHAs compared with BCHAs and improvements in speech understanding in noise compared with ACHAs, however ACHAs may produce better audiological results for other outcomes; the limited evidence reduces certainty. Hearing is improved with BAHAs compared with unaided hearing. Improvements in QoL with BAHAs were identified by a hearing-specific instrument but not generic QoL measures. Studies comparing unilateral with bilateral BAHAs suggested benefits of bilateral BAHAs in many, but not all, situations.

A decision analytic model was developed to estimate the costs and benefits of unilateral BAHAs over a ten year time horizon. The incremental cost per user receiving BAHA, compared with BCHA, was £16,344 for children and £13,281 for adults. In an exploratory analysis the incremental cost per QALY gained was between £118,898 and £55,424 for children and between £98,790 to £46,051 for adults for BAHAs compared with BCHA, depending on the assumed QoL gain and proportion of each modelled cohort using their hearing aid for eight or more hours per day. Deterministic sensitivity analysis suggested results were highly sensitive to the assumed proportion of people using BCHA for eight or more hours per day.

Exploratory cost effectiveness analysis suggests that BAHAs are unlikely to be a cost effective option where the benefi ts are similar for BAHAs and their comparators. The greater the benefit from aided hearing and the greater the difference in the proportion of people using the hearing aid for eight hours or more per day, the more likely BAHAs are to be a cost effective option. The inclusion of other dimensions of QoL may also increase the likelihood of BAHAs being a cost effective option.

A national audit of BAHAs is needed to provide clarity on the many areas of uncertainty surrounding BAHAs.
bone anchored hearing aids, bilaterally deaf, hearing impairment, systematic review, economic evaluation
738-738
Jones, J.
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Colquitt, J.L.
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Harris, P.
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Loveman, E.
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Bird, A.
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Clegg, A.J.
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Baguley, D.M.
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Proops, D.W.
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Mitchell, T.E.
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Sheehan, P.Z.
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Welch, K.
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Jones, J.
270b303b-6bad-4be7-8ea0-63d0e8015c91
Colquitt, J.L.
741c69a3-d9e0-4f10-b457-e496541e7915
Harris, P.
65908d3a-d64f-436d-829a-fd500923515b
Loveman, E.
06ff1bf1-0189-4330-b22d-f5a917e9871d
Bird, A.
1044e5d8-2dff-41c2-afaa-377c2785e8e5
Clegg, A.J.
838091f5-39df-4dbe-a369-675b26f2301b
Baguley, D.M.
65163a80-45b1-4e3d-99c0-2b2cd78290cb
Proops, D.W.
1110f00b-07a3-471f-8167-b05ea7228200
Mitchell, T.E.
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Sheehan, P.Z.
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Welch, K.
2603c214-aace-486f-8723-b006873248a5

Jones, J., Colquitt, J.L., Harris, P., Loveman, E., Bird, A., Clegg, A.J., Baguley, D.M., Proops, D.W., Mitchell, T.E., Sheehan, P.Z. and Welch, K. (2011) Bone-anchored hearing aids for people who are bilaterally deaf: a systematic review and economic evaluation. International Journal of Audiology, 50 (10), 738-738. (doi:10.3109/14992027.2011.588967). (PMID:21729632)

Record type: Article

Abstract

The aim of this systematic review, using standard methodology,was to assess the clinical and cost-effectiveness of bone-anchored hearing aids (BAHAs) for people who are bilaterally deaf. Prospective studies comparing BAHAs versus conventional hearing aids [air conduction hearing aid (ACHA) or bone conduction hearing aid (BCHA)], unaided hearing or ear surgery; and unilateral versus bilateral BAHAs were eligible. Twelve clinical effectiveness studies were included. No eligible comparisons with ear surgery were identified. Overall quality was rated as weak for all included studies.

There appeared to be some audiological benefits of BAHAs compared with BCHAs and improvements in speech understanding in noise compared with ACHAs, however ACHAs may produce better audiological results for other outcomes; the limited evidence reduces certainty. Hearing is improved with BAHAs compared with unaided hearing. Improvements in QoL with BAHAs were identified by a hearing-specific instrument but not generic QoL measures. Studies comparing unilateral with bilateral BAHAs suggested benefits of bilateral BAHAs in many, but not all, situations.

A decision analytic model was developed to estimate the costs and benefits of unilateral BAHAs over a ten year time horizon. The incremental cost per user receiving BAHA, compared with BCHA, was £16,344 for children and £13,281 for adults. In an exploratory analysis the incremental cost per QALY gained was between £118,898 and £55,424 for children and between £98,790 to £46,051 for adults for BAHAs compared with BCHA, depending on the assumed QoL gain and proportion of each modelled cohort using their hearing aid for eight or more hours per day. Deterministic sensitivity analysis suggested results were highly sensitive to the assumed proportion of people using BCHA for eight or more hours per day.

Exploratory cost effectiveness analysis suggests that BAHAs are unlikely to be a cost effective option where the benefi ts are similar for BAHAs and their comparators. The greater the benefit from aided hearing and the greater the difference in the proportion of people using the hearing aid for eight hours or more per day, the more likely BAHAs are to be a cost effective option. The inclusion of other dimensions of QoL may also increase the likelihood of BAHAs being a cost effective option.

A national audit of BAHAs is needed to provide clarity on the many areas of uncertainty surrounding BAHAs.

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More information

Published date: September 2011
Additional Information: Abstracts of the British Society of Audiology Annual Conference, September 8–10, 2010, School of Psychological Sciences, University of Manchester, UK
Keywords: bone anchored hearing aids, bilaterally deaf, hearing impairment, systematic review, economic evaluation
Organisations: Faculty of Medicine

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 341777
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/341777
PURE UUID: 17869434-ccd7-4abd-be51-afe6f6396dfa

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Date deposited: 06 Aug 2012 10:55
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 11:44

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Contributors

Author: J. Jones
Author: J.L. Colquitt
Author: P. Harris
Author: E. Loveman
Author: A. Bird
Author: A.J. Clegg
Author: D.M. Baguley
Author: D.W. Proops
Author: T.E. Mitchell
Author: P.Z. Sheehan
Author: K. Welch

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