Stem cell trial to cure hearing loss in infants
WASHINGTON:
US researchers have begun a groundbreaking trial to test the
potential of umbilical cord blood transplants, a kind of stem cell
therapy, to treat and possibly reverse hearing loss in infants.

Sensorineural hearing loss affects about six per 1,000 children,
and there is no available medical treatment. -Photo by AP |
The phase I trial follows promising studies on mice showing that such
transplants were able to rebuild the structures of the inner ear, and
some anecdotal evidence from humans, sparking hope of a cure for some
forms of deafness.
One of those people is two-year-old Finn McGrath, who suffered brain
damage after being deprived of oxygen during a prolonged and complicated
delivery, according to his mother, Laura.
Vision issues
"His doctors told us he was at high risk for cerebral palsy, vision
issues, hearing problems and mental retardation," she said in an
interview with AFP. Finn's early days were an all-out struggle to
survive, so for his parents, learning that he had failed his hearing
tests and had damaged hair cells - the sensory receptors in the inner
ear that pick up sounds -was almost an afterthought.
He had organ failure, breathing problems, and his cerebral palsy left
him unable to roll, crawl or walk, hold his head up, talk or eat.
As his parents searched for ways to help him, they came upon stories
online that told of studies using cord blood to help children with
cerebral palsy and other disorders.
Prior to his birth, the McGraths had arranged to privately bank his
umbilical cord blood, a procedure that costs around $2,000 plus storage
fees, and remains controversial among paediatricians.
Private companies such as the Cord Blood Registry, which is funding
the Texas study on hearing loss, urge expecting parents to bank their
umbilical cord blood and reserve it for personal use as a way to protect
their family..
That advice runs counter to the guidelines issues by the American
Academy of Paediatrics in 2007, which calls such claims
"unsubstantiated" and says banking for personal or family use "should be
discouraged" but is "encouraged" if it is to be stored in a bank for
public use.
Cord blood trial
Since Finn's parents had already banked his, they enrolled him in
cord blood trial for cerebral palsy in North Carolina and he received
his first transplant in November 2009 when he was about seven weeks old.
A second transfusion followed and by May, his parents began to notice
a change. Night-time noises, like an alarm on his food pump or the sound
of ripping medical tape, would suddenly startle him awake, his mother
recalled..
"He started vocalising sounds and we could tell that he was
anticipating things that we would say. Like, if he had heard a story a
number of times or a song, he would smile like he recognised the song or
the story."
Finn had a third infusion in September 2010, when he was one year
old. Four months later, an otoacoustic emissions test (OAE), which plays
a sound and picks up vibrations in the cochlea and hair cells, came back
normal.
Hearing loss
The early hearing tests that showed hearing loss were not exactly the
same as the later tests that came back normal, so McGrath is cautious
about comparing them directly, but she believes the cord blood
transfusions may have helped.
"All I can tell you is anecdotally he was not able to hear for
probably the first three or four months of his life, and then when he
was about six to eight months old, he started hearing."
The hearing trial in Texas aims to take a first step in testing the
safety, and later the efficacy, of transfusing cord blood in children
age six weeks to 18 months who have sustained post-birth sensorineural
hearing loss.
Some reasons that children lose their hearing at or after birth may
include oxygen deprivation, head injury, infection, strong doses of
antibiotics or loud noises.Sensorineural hearing loss affects
approximately six per 1,000 children, and there is no available medical
treatment.
Hearing aids or cochlear implants are typically offered to boost the
ability of the damaged tissues. "Stem cell therapy may potentially
repair the damaged structures of the inner ear and restore normal
hearing," lead investigator Sami Fakhri told AFP.
"We are at the initial stages of this process and the results are
looking promising," Fakhri added. Research using stem cells in cord
blood, known as hematopoietic cells, is already under way on some types
of brain injury, cerebral palsy, juvenile diabetes, kidney and lung
disease, he said.
The new study at Memorial Hermann-Texas Medical Center is being
funded by the Cord Blood Registry, a private bank, and those eligible
must have already banked their own umbilical cord blood with CBR.
But to Stephen Epstein, an otolaryngologist in Maryland, that does
not pose a conflict of interest, because separate medical institutions
in Texas and Georgia are conducting the Food and Drug
Administration-approved research.
"If both of them can reproduce the same results then I would say it
has some validity to it," said Epstein, who is not involved in the
study.
"This is certainly a welcome, acceptable experiment, but it should be
looked at with caution and time will tell." One patient is already
enrolled and the study, which runs for one year, has room for nine
more.While Finn McGrath still faces many challenges due to his cerebral
palsy, his mother is grateful for the things he can do.
"I don't know how much worse off he would have been without the stem
cell transfusion," McGrath said, pointing to his normal cognition, lack
of seizures, good hearing and vision.
"We remain hopeful that he will continue to improve."
- DAWN
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