A Hearing Intervention and Health-Related Quality of Life in Older Adults: A Secondary Analysis of the ACHIEVE Randomized Clinical Trial

ACHIEVE Collaborative Research Group

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Abstract

Importance: Health-related quality of life is a critical health outcome and a clinically important patient-reported outcome in clinical trials. Hearing loss is associated with poorer health-related quality-of-life in older adults. Objective: To investigate the 3-year outcomes of hearing intervention vs health education control on health-related quality of life. Design, Setting, and Participants: This secondary analysis of a randomized clinical trial included participants treated for hearing loss at multiple US centers between 2018 and 2019 with 3-year follow-up completed in 2022. Eligible participants were aged 70 to 84 years, had untreated hearing loss, and were without substantial cognitive impairment. Participants were randomized (1:1) to hearing intervention or health education control and followed every 6 months. Intervention: Hearing intervention (provision of hearing aids and related technologies, counseling, education) or health education control (individual sessions covering topics relevant to chronic disease, disability prevention). Main Outcomes and Measures: Three-year change in the RAND-36 physical and mental health component scores over 3 years. The 8 individual domains of health-related quality-of-life were additionally assessed. Outcomes measured at baseline and at 6-month, 1-year, 2-year, and 3-year follow-ups. Intervention effect sizes estimated using a 2-level linear mixed effects model under the intention-to-treat principle. Results: A total of 977 participants were analyzed (mean [SD] age, 76.8 [4.0] years; 523 female [53.5%]; 112 Black [11.5%], 858 White [87.8%]; 521 had a Bachelor's degree or higher [53.4%]), with 490 in the hearing intervention and 487 in the control group. Over 3 years, hearing intervention (vs health education control) had no significant association with physical (intervention, -0.49 [95% CI, -3.05 to 2.08]; control, -0.92 [95% CI, -3.39 to 1.55]; difference, 0.43 [95% CI, -0.64 to 1.51]) or mental (intervention, 0.38 [95% CI, -1.58 to 2.34]; control, -0.09 [95% CI, -1.99 to 1.81]; difference, 0.47 [95% CI, -0.41 to 1.35]) health-related quality of life. Conclusions and Relevance: In this secondary analysis of a randomized clinical trial, hearing intervention had no association with physical and mental health-related quality-of-life over 3 years among older adults with hearing loss. Additional intervention strategies may be needed to modify health-related quality among older adults with hearing loss. Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03243422.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)e2446591
JournalJAMA Network Open
Volume7
Issue number11
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 4 2024

PubMed: MeSH publication types

  • Journal Article
  • Randomized Controlled Trial

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