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Systematic review and meta-analyses of randomized controlled trials examining tinnitus management

✍ Scribed by Derek J. Hoare; Victoria L. Kowalkowski; Sujin Kang; Deborah A. Hall


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2011
Tongue
English
Weight
380 KB
Volume
121
Category
Article
ISSN
0023-852X

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


Objectives/Hypothesis

To evaluate the existing level of evidence for tinnitus management strategies identified in the UK Department of Health's Good Practice Guideline.

Study Design

Systematic review of peer-reviewed literature and meta-analyses.

Methods

Searches were conducted in PubMed, Cambridge Scientific Abstracts, Web of Science, and EMBASE (earliest to August 2010), supplemented by hand searches in October 2010. Only randomized controlled trials that used validated questionnaire measures of symptoms (i.e., measures of tinnitus distress, anxiety, depression) were included.

Results

Twenty-eight randomized controlled trials met our inclusion criteria, most of which provide moderate levels of evidence for the effects they reported. Levels of evidence were generally limited by the lack of blinding, lack of power calculations, and incomplete data reporting in these studies. Only studies examining cognitive behavioral therapy were numerous and similar enough to perform meta-analysis, from which the efficacy of cognitive behavioral therapy (moderate effect size) appears to be reasonably established. Antidepressants were the only drug class to show any evidence of potential benefit.

Conclusions

The efficacy of most interventions for tinnitus benefit remains to be demonstrated conclusively. In particular, high-level assessment of the benefit derived from those interventions most commonly used in practice, namely hearing aids, maskers, and tinnitus retraining therapy needs to be performed.


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