P-191. Detection of Hearing Loss by Formal Audiological Screening Test in Pediatric and Adult Acute Meningitis: A Global Systematic Review and Meta-analysis
Luisa F Alviz, Carla Y Kim, Ana C Benevides-Tadinac, Jackson A Roberts, Lauren E Monette, Caroline E Harrer, Francisco J Varela, Soonmyung A Hwang, Blen M Gebresilassie, Pilar Balcarce, Manya Prasad, John Usseglio, Kiran T Thakur

TL;DR
This study finds that hearing loss in meningitis patients is more commonly detected before discharge than after, suggesting early audiological screening is crucial.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into optimal timing for audiological screening in meningitis patients to detect hearing loss early.
Findings
Hearing loss diagnoses were more frequent before discharge in both adults and children.
Pooled prevalence of hearing loss was highest during hospitalization or at discharge (30.4%).
Standardized auditory evaluations are needed following acute meningitis diagnosis.
Abstract
Acute community-acquired bacterial meningitis remains a significant global health concern with significant mortality and morbidity, including neurological sequelae such as sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL). Early detection of meningitis-associated SNHL mitigates permanent deafness and poor outcomes. This systematic review evaluates the optimal timing of formal audiological testing in relation to the diagnosis of acute meningitis in adults and children. A literature search was conducted across Ovid Medline, Elsevier Embase, and Cochrane databases. Studies reporting the time frames for hearing loss (HL) detection secondary to acute meningitis using formal audiological tests were included. Data were analyzed descriptively for continuous and categorical variables. A meta-analysis calculated the pooled prevalence of outcomes, with subgroup analyses stratified by the time frame of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBacterial Infections and Vaccines · Hearing, Cochlea, Tinnitus, Genetics · Hearing Loss and Rehabilitation
