Nature Communications (Aug 2024)

Combining sound with tongue stimulation for the treatment of tinnitus: a multi-site single-arm controlled pivotal trial

  • Michael Boedts,
  • Andreas Buechner,
  • S. Guan Khoo,
  • Welmoed Gjaltema,
  • Frederique Moreels,
  • Anke Lesinski-Schiedat,
  • Philipp Becker,
  • Helen MacMahon,
  • Lieke Vixseboxse,
  • Razieh Taghavi,
  • Hubert H. Lim,
  • Thomas Lenarz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-50473-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Bimodal neuromodulation is emerging as a nonsurgical treatment for tinnitus. Bimodal treatment combining sound therapy with electrical tongue stimulation using the Lenire device is evaluated in a controlled pivotal trial (TENT-A3, NCT05227365) consisting of 6-weeks of sound-only stimulation (Stage 1) followed by 6-weeks of bimodal treatment (Stage 2) with 112 participants serving as their own control. The primary endpoint compares the responder rate observed in Stage 2 versus Stage 1, where a responder exceeds 7 points in the Tinnitus Handicap Inventory. In participants with moderate or more severe tinnitus, there is a clinically superior performance of bimodal treatment (58.6%; 95% CI: 43.5%, 73.6%; p = 0.022) compared to sound therapy alone (43.2%; 95% CI: 29.7%, 57.8%), which is not observed in the full cohort across all severity groups. Consistent results are observed for the secondary endpoint based on the Tinnitus Functional Index (bimodal treatment: 45.5%; 95% CI: 31.7%, 59.9%; sound-only stimulation: 29.6%; 95% CI: 18.2%, 44.2%; p = 0.010), where a responder exceeds 13 points. There are no device related serious adverse events. These positive outcomes led to FDA De Novo approval of the Lenire device for tinnitus treatment.