# Cochlear Implant in Children with Congenital CMV Infection: Long-Term Results from an Italian Multicentric Study

**Authors:** Francesca Forli, Silvia Capobianco, Stefano Berrettini, Francesco Lazzerini, Rita Malesci, Anna Rita Fetoni, Serena Salomè, Davide Brotto, Patrizia Trevisi, Leonardo Franz, Elisabetta Genovese, Andrea Ciorba, Silvia Palma

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/children12070908 · 2025-07-10

## TL;DR

This study shows that cochlear implants significantly improve hearing and language in children with congenital CMV, despite varying outcomes influenced by factors like MRI findings and neurodevelopmental issues.

## Contribution

The study provides long-term data on cochlear implant outcomes in children with congenital CMV and identifies clinical and radiological predictors of performance.

## Key findings

- CI significantly improved auditory and language outcomes in children with cCMV (p < 0.001).
- Symptomatic status at birth correlated with worse post-CI auditory and language outcomes.
- MRI abnormalities and neurodevelopmental comorbidities were linked to lower performance, though not always statistically significant.

## Abstract

Background/Objectives: Congenital cytomegalovirus (cCMV) infection is the most common non-genetic cause of sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) in children. In cases of severe-to-profound SNHL, cochlear implantation (CI) is a widely used intervention, but outcomes remain variable due to possible neurodevelopmental comorbidities. This study aimed to evaluate the long-term auditory and language outcomes in children with cCMV after CI and to explore clinical and radiological predictors of post-CI performance. Methods: Fifty-three children with cCMV and bilateral severe-to-profound SNHL who underwent CI at five tertiary referral centers in Italy were included in the study. Auditory and language outcomes were assessed pre- and post-implantation using the Categories of Auditory Performance II (CAP-II) scale, the Nottingham 3-Level Classification, and the Bates Language Development Scale. Brain MRI abnormalities were classified according to the Alarcón classification. Correlations were explored between outcome scores and symptomatic status at birth, MRI findings, and neurodevelopmental comorbidities. Results: At birth, 40 children (75.5%) were symptomatic and 13 (24.5%) asymptomatic. Neurodevelopmental comorbidities were present in 19 children (35.8%). MRI was normal in 15 (28.3%), mildly abnormal in 26 (49%), and moderately to severely abnormal in 12 (22.6%). Auditory and language outcomes improved significantly post-CI (p < 0.001), though the outcomes varied widely. Twenty-five children (47%) reached CAP level ≥ 6, and thirteen (23%) reached Bates Level 6. Symptomatic status at birth correlated weakly with worse CAP (ρ = −0.291, p = 0.038) and Bates (ρ = −0.310, p = 0.028) scores. Higher Alarcón scores were significantly associated with neurodevelopmental comorbidities, though not directly with post-CI auditory and language outcomes. Finally, the presence of neurodevelopmental disabilities was generally associated with lower results, even if without statistical significance. Conclusions: CI provides substantial auditory and language benefit in children with cCMV, even in cases of severe neurodevelopmental comorbidities. MRI and developmental assessments, as well as perinatal history for clinical signs and symptoms, are helpful in guiding expectations and personalizing post-implantation support.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** congenital cytomegalovirus (MONDO:0017409), sensorineural hearing loss (MONDO:0010576)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Brain MRI abnormalities (MESH:D001927), CAP (OMIM:115650), neurodevelopmental disabilities (MESH:D007859), Congenital CMV Infection (MESH:D003586), SNHL (MESH:D006319)

## Figures

6 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12293348/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12293348