# Self-Perceived Hearing Handicap and Audiometric Severity in Age-Related Hearing Loss: Associations with Age and Sex

**Authors:** Luka Bonetti

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/audiolres16010024 · Audiology Research · 2026-02-06

## TL;DR

This study finds that self-reported hearing difficulties in older adults strongly correlate with the severity of hearing loss measured objectively, highlighting the importance of considering both measures in assessing age-related hearing loss.

## Contribution

The study demonstrates a strong and independent association between self-perceived hearing handicap and audiometric severity in age-related hearing loss, independent of age and sex.

## Key findings

- HHIE-S-CRO scores increased with worsening audiometric thresholds and hearing loss categories.
- BE PTA-4 was independently associated with overall and emotional subscale scores of SPHH.
- Ordinal logistic regression showed graded associations between SPHH and WHO-defined hearing loss severity categories.

## Abstract

Background/Objective: Self-perceived hearing handicap (SPHH) reflects functional consequences of hearing loss beyond audiometric measures. Clarifying its relationship with audiometric severity and demographic factors is important for understanding age-related hearing loss (ARHL). This study examined associations between SPHH, audiometric measures, age, and sex in individuals with ARHL. Methods: A total of 145 adults (50 men, 95 women) aged 60–89 years (mean 71.65 ± 7.19 years) participated. Hearing status was defined using better-ear pure-tone average thresholds at 0.5, 1, 2, and 4 kHz (BE PTA-4), with ≥20 dB HL as the cutoff and World Health Organization (WHO)-defined severity categories. SPHH was assessed using the Croatian Hearing Handicap Inventory for the Elderly–Screening version (HHIE-S-CRO). HHIE-S-CRO total and subscale scores were examined across BE PTA-4 values and hearing loss categories. Associations were analyzed using correlation and linear regression adjusted for age and sex; group differences were tested using the Kruskal–Wallis test, and ordinal logistic regression assessed monotonic trends across ordered severity categories. Results: HHIE-S-CRO total and subscale scores increased with worsening BE PTA-4 and across hearing loss categories, with substantial overlap. Strong correlations were observed between HHIE-S-CRO scores and audiometric measures. In linear regression, BE PTA-4 was independently associated with HHIE-S-CRO total, emotional, and social/situational scores, whereas age and sex were not. Kruskal–Wallis tests showed significant differences across hearing loss categories. Ordinal logistic regression anchored to WHO severity categories demonstrated graded associations for HHIE-S-CRO total and emotional scores, while the social/situational subscale showed greater dispersion and overlap despite a statistically significant association. Conclusions: SPHH in ARHL shows a strong association with audiometric severity, with particularly robust correspondence for overall and emotional domains, underscoring the complementary role of patient-reported outcome measures alongside audiometric assessment.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** cochlear and neural degeneration (MESH:D015834), sensory impairment (MESH:D012678), injury to (MESH:D014947), Hearing Loss (MESH:D034381), auditory dysfunction (MESH:D006311), ARHL (MESH:D010024), communication (MESH:D003147), Handicap (MESH:D009422), functional impairment (MESH:D003072), speech-in-noise deficits (MESH:D013064), depressive symptoms (MESH:D003866)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

55 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12922140/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12922140