Hearing restoration with gene therapy – I knew this day would come

For me, this is a profound moment. It will be even more profound if many people can benefit from it.

Some of you may know that I suffer about an 85% hearing loss, and even with powerful hearing aids I still have very poor hearing which has gotten almost non-functional over the years. It makes me a social hermit since I don’t function well in public. It is part of the reason I became a broadcaster, because I had such a terrible time in college lectures and with language requirements in the school of science. In broadcasting, I only had to talk to the camera or to the microphone. It was a job that was not only a dream come true, it brought me out of my shell that many hearing impaired people live in due to the social isolation it brings.

I started losing my hearing as a child due to being treated with the antibiotic Tetracycline, which is known to be ototoxic. By the time I was 10, I needed hearing aids, but fortunately, I had formed my primary speech skills. Many other people who lose hearing as children aren’t so lucky as I and have speech problems as a result.

I knew this day would come, I predicted that gene therapy to treat cochlear nerve deafness would be coming over 10 years ago. I can only hope I can be able to take advantage of it someday. I won’t hide my own selfishness, I want to be one of those people.

Fully functional <i>(Image: Steve Gschmeissner/SPL)</i>
Fully functional hair cells in the cochlea (Image: Steve Gschmeissner/SPL)

Deaf people get gene tweak to restore natural hearing

People who have lost their hearing will be injected with a harmless virus carrying a gene that should trigger the regrowth of their ears’ sensory receptors

IN TWO months’ time, a group of profoundly deaf people could be able to hear again, thanks to the world’s first gene therapy trial for deafness.

The volunteers, who lost their hearing through damage or disease, will get an injection of a harmless virus containing a gene that should trigger the regrowth of the sensory receptors in the ear.

The idea is that the method will return a more natural sense of hearing than other technologies can provide. Hearing aids merely amplify sounds, while cochlear implants transform sound waves into electrical waves that the brain interprets, but they don’t pick up all of the natural frequencies. This means people can find it difficult to distinguish many of the nuances in voices and music.

“The holy grail is to give people natural hearing back,” says Hinrich Staecker at the University of Kansas Medical Center, who is leading the trial. “That’s what we hope to do – we are essentially repairing the ear rather than artificially imitating what it does.”

There are still many things we don’t know about how the ear works. This is because the delicate machinery of the inner ear is enclosed in the hardest bone in the body, making it difficult to isolate without causing damage.

What we do know is that sound waves are funnelled into the ear, making the ear drum vibrate. These vibrations are transferred to the cochlea in the inner ear via three tiny bones. Thousands of sensory receptors line a part of the cochlea called the organ of Corti, as rows of inner and outer hair cells. Sound waves, amplified by the outer hair cells (shown above right), vibrate the inner hair cells, opening ion channels on their surface that let neurotransmitters flow in. This triggers electrical activity in the cochlear neurons, passing the information to the brain so it can be processed.

Both inner and outer hair cells can be damaged by loud noises, drugs such as some antibiotics and disease, and don’t regrow. A possible fix arose in 2003, when researchers discovered that certain genes can transform the cells supporting the hair cells into both types of hair cell.

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Complete story here.

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April 24, 2014 5:18 am

My wife (a physician) was surprised when I told her Anthony said he’d been treated with tetracycline as a child. “We don’t prescribe that for children,” she said; “It discolors their teeth.” But I see in the comments above that others received it, with that result. It must have taken a while before pediatric use was discontinued.
/Mr Lynn

REPLY:
Yes, I have discolored teeth as well. – Anthony

April 24, 2014 5:19 am

So glad I didn’t buy that expensive hearing aid on ebay USA or worse still, buy an even dearer one locally here in Oz. The prices are outrageous and as I have noticed with friends, often don’t work well at all.

Geoff Connolly
April 24, 2014 5:19 am

Thanks for sharing your personal situation Anthony and my sincere best wishes to you and all the people that might benefit from this research.

Janet Smith
April 24, 2014 5:27 am

Anthony,
I can only imagine how much this affects everyday life. My father became more and more unable to hear our conversations and thus withdrew from the usual cut and thrust of everyday life. How very isolating this must have been. Everything must be wished for this therapy.
Southern Girl

Ian W
April 24, 2014 5:29 am

Mique says:
April 24, 2014 at 12:58 am
I became profoundly deaf in my mid-30s (exposure to military jet aircraft noise) and have had bilateral cochlear implants for some years now. While not a universal panacea, they work very well for me. If you haven’t already explored the implant option, Anthony, I’d strongly recommend that you do so as an alternative solution. If you are a suitable candidate, it offers proven technology and a very satisfactory result that is available now.

I also have just had one of the new generation cochlear implants ‘activated’. I have gone from profoundly deaf to having the hearing acuity, in all frequencies, “of a young child” (to quote the audiologists). The new processors are significantly better in noisy environments and have adaptive processing of the directional microphones that blanks out noise but not speech. Cochlear implants are literally life changing. All you have to do is ‘train’ your brain to the new ‘sound’ inputs and hearing discrimination rapidly improves.

Don Bennett
April 24, 2014 5:32 am

Very interesting and exciting. Let’s hope the trials go well and no adverse complications develop.

Janice
April 24, 2014 6:24 am

ChipMonk says: “Hey we could become… The 2-Blue Group… oh wait, someone did something like that… blue bald people… hmmmm”
Smurfs . . .

Annie
April 24, 2014 6:28 am

I do hope that there is success in this research. I cannot imagine how hard it is to be really deaf as I have had good hearing all my life, other than in one ear for several weeks last year with a bad dose of sinusitis. I found that a real trial, so what you have to live with is beyond my comprehension. All best wishes and with lots of admiration for what you accomplish here Anth-ny. Annie

physicsgeeky
April 24, 2014 6:40 am

An 11 year old in my neighborhood lost his hearing at age four and now has cochlear implants. I’m sure that both he and his parents would love for this to become reality.
Good luck to you and all sufferers of hearing loss, Anthony. Let’s hope that this is the solution people have been waiting for.

April 24, 2014 6:59 am

Anthony, thanks for posting this hopeful development, and may it end up well for many. It would be especially fitting if you recover some hearing, as you have done much to make the sound of reason clear and loud.

April 24, 2014 7:08 am

I know its not very “PC” but I will have my secretary’s prayer circle include you in their prayers, asking for a speedy, effective treatment and cure. (My secretary seems to have a direct line) lol. Seriously if for some reason anything changes with getting that treatment, PM me and I will give you some names here and overseas that can help you out. Kind Regards, Sherry
Ps–now that you will “de-hermitize”…are you married? 😉

April 24, 2014 7:08 am

There’s a reason my scientist friends call that magazine ‘Non Scientist’.
At this time the scientists haven’t even selected the test subjects, let alone done the experiment.
Hearing involves more than the ear and nerve cells to the brain; the brain itself has a big part of the functionality of hearing, and this will not be addressed by the scheme.
The scientist leading the trial says ‘this may help 1-2% of people with hearing loss.’ Nevertheless, it is exciting and hopeful, not so much for itself as for its implications.
Just curious- how communicable is the virus, and what is the impact of the gene on individuals with excellent hearing already?

Mark Bofill
April 24, 2014 7:15 am

Thanks for running this Anthony, and best wishes, I hope you are able to take advantage of this as well.

kenin
April 24, 2014 7:24 am

I would only consider such treatment on one condition: for those who have hearing loss and have HAD children- go for it!! For those who have hearing loss, but want children- wait until you’ve fathered or given birth to children.
How such treatment can effect ones biology, is not know to us, but to those who have been practicing “gene therapy” for decades are masters.
Be careful….
I post the above with absolutely good intentions and compassion…… nothing else.

James Strom
April 24, 2014 7:33 am

Anthony, you should be careful before concluding that your desire for better hearing is selfish. Selfishness is a concept that is much analyzed in the literature on ethics, but let me put it briefly: the desire to be a better listener is not inherently or exclusively selfish.

Louis LeBlanc
April 24, 2014 8:21 am

Great news, Anthony, for both of us. I have had a similar experience with poor hearing and now, at 80, it is a serious problem for me. Even with aids, I have to ask for repeats about half the time. If the therapy becomes available to you, I will gladly contribute if you need funds. WUWT is my daily must-read blog, not only for the factual info and opinion, but particularly because you have maintained a civil and respectful environment for us believers in real science.

April 24, 2014 8:27 am
Louis LeBlanc
April 24, 2014 8:31 am

Message for Eve Elizabeth:
You can buy hearing aids on the internet for $600 per pair, which provide (IMO) 90-95% as good results as “clinic” hearing aids at 10% the cost

April 24, 2014 8:31 am

Anthony,
I for one did not know of your hearing issues. I will light a candle at church and pray for you to get this miracle treatment. For all you have done to educate me on all sorts of issues I hope this miracle comes to you soon….
John P

TimC
April 24, 2014 8:56 am

Anthony: may I join the many others here in hoping that the Kansas trial meets every success and leads to restoration treatment being widely available both to yourself and all those suffering any serious hearing impairment. Bon chance, mon ami – and if you believe it would help in any way to have a crowd-funding exercise relating to this trial, like many others above: count me in.

CRS, DrPH
April 24, 2014 8:56 am

Anthony, thank you for sharing your personal struggles with us (and the world). I was not aware of this, and you continue to impress.
I have epilepsy, controlled by brain surgery, so I know much about your battles. One has to wonder…how many revolutionary medical innovations might we have developed if the funding had gone into these areas instead of “climate change research”?
We may have cured cancer, world hunger, diabetes etc. and probably would have. Pouring all of that money onto rent-seeking academics like Mann is a historic travesty.

Ian L. McQueen
April 24, 2014 8:57 am

Please keep us posted on your progress with this. I lost most hearing in one ear due to an accident and was told that the problem was due to the hairs. I would REALLY like to regain hearing in that ear!
You have our sympathies regarding your hearing loss and very much appreciate the huge amount of information that you keep posted at this site.
Ian M

timothy sorenson
April 24, 2014 9:24 am

I THANK YOU Anthony, from college on I have been suffering tinnitus, with it getting worse. I was not a rock music listener, infact, the ringing I suspect made me one who didn’t like music. But I took massive amounts of tetracycline as a teenager until my body rejected it and I became allergic to it. Now, I might know the cause of my ever increasing tinnitus and ever decreasing hearing.

April 24, 2014 9:56 am

The story of Sarah Churman
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2014/04/23/hearing-restoration-with-gene-therapy-i-knew-this-day-would-come/#comment-1620405
was most intriguing when you look at how she got the money together for it. To start off with, she did not have a penny for it. As far as I remember, it included an interview with Ellen Degeneres who just gave her the money for the second operation.
To her, this whole thing really was a miracle (from God)
(interestingly, Jesus has said that one day we would do miracles greater than Him)
It seems there are already some people here who would be prepared to contribute to a fund for this. Usually one would ask a friend to administrate this and he would inform donors of the goals and the progress.
Anthony, let me pray for you.
Don’t be afraid to ask.