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Cochlear Implant Infections and Outcomes: Experience From a Single Large Center

Ananth Vijendren, Amritha Ajith, Daniele Borsetto, James R. Tysome, Patrick Axon, Neil Donnelly, Manohar Bance

2020Otology & Neurotology15 citationsDOI

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To review our experience with cochlear implant infections over the past 5 years, the management strategy and to identify predictive factors that led to explantation. STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective record-base case series of cochlear implant infections. SETTING: Tertiary otology and implant center. PATIENTS: All patients who had cochlear implantation over a period of 5 years. INTERVENTION(S): None. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): To identify risk factors, rates and outcomes of cochlear implant infections, and to formulate strategies to develop clearer management protocols to prevent cochlear implant explantation. RESULTS: Of 704 implanted patients, 22 suffered a postoperative soft tissue infection (3%). Fifty-nine percent of these infected patients resulted in explantation, giving an explantation rate of 1.8% over the whole study population. One hundred percent of the infected implants identified as having either Staph. Aureus or Pseudomonas spp. as the single causative organism resulted in explantation. CONCLUSIONS: There is a high rate of explantation when infection is detected. Currently there is no clear consensus on medical management, such as choice of antibiotics or length of antibiotic course. A registry of cochlear implants would facilitate standard reporting methods for severity and type of infection, to be able to pool data across centers and form a more robust management protocol for cochlear implant infections.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineCochlear implantImplantOtologyRetrospective cohort studyMedical recordSingle CenterSurgeryAudiologyHearing Loss and RehabilitationEar Surgery and Otitis MediaHearing, Cochlea, Tinnitus, Genetics