Neuromod Devices Limited, the Irish medical device company specializing in the treatment of tinnitus, announced the publication of results of the company’s TENT-A2 (Treatment Evaluation of Neuromodulation for Tinnitus – Stage A2) clinical trial in Nature – Scientific Reports in a paper titled “Different bimodal neuromodulation settings reduce tinnitus symptoms in a large randomized trial.”

The full paper is available here: TENT-A2 results1.

Tinnitus, commonly referred to as “ringing in the ears” is thought to affect between 10-15% of the global adult population2,3. The TENT-A2 trial, which included 191 participants, is the company’s “second large-scale clinical trial and sought to replicate and further enhance the results demonstrated in the company’s TENT-A1 trial, a study that evaluated the safety and efficacy of Lenire, the company’s non-invasive bimodal neuromodulation device in 326 participants.”

The publication of the TENT-A2 results in Nature – Scientific Reports follows on from the publication of the TENT-A1 results as the cover story in Science – Translational Medicine in 2020 (the full TENT-A1 results paper is available here: TENT-A1 results)4.

The TENT-A2 study investigated if changing treatment stimuli after six weeks of treatment would result in greater improvement in tinnitus symptoms than observed in the TENT-A1 study, during which participants were treated with the same stimuli for the entire 12-week treatment period.

In the TENT-A1 study, treatment compliant participants demonstrated a mean improvement that was more than twice the published clinically important improvement. In the TENT-A2 study, 95% of treatment compliant participants achieved a greater average improvement in symptoms compared to TENT-A11,4,5 and almost three times the published clinically important improvement. 91% of treatment compliant participants achieved an improvement that sustained 12 months after treatment concluded1,5.

TENT-A2 is reportedly “the second large-scale clinical trial validating the safety, with high patient satisfaction and tolerability, of bimodal neuromodulation as a treatment for tinnitus while also demonstrating greater efficacy in reducing tinnitus symptoms through optimized treatment regimens compared to the first large-scale trial.”

Bimodal neuromodulation is the stimulation of nerves with two paired stimuli for therapeutic purposes. The tinnitus treatment device that was used in the study, known as Lenire and available commercially throughout Europe, was developed by Neuromod. It consists of wireless (Bluetooth) headphones that deliver sequences of audio tones to both ears, combined with electrical stimulation pulses delivered to the surface of the tongue via 32 electrodes on a proprietary device trademarked as Tonguetip, according to the company. The device’s settings can be configured to provide treatment with different combinations of audio and electrical stimuli.

The timing, intensity, and delivery of the stimuli are controlled by a handheld controller that each participant is trained to use prior to continuing treatment from home. Before using the treatment for the first time, the device is configured to the patient’s hearing profile and optimized to the patient’s sensitivity level for tongue stimulation, Neuromod says.

Similarly to TENT-A1, participants in the TENT-A2 trial were instructed to use Lenire for 60 minutes each day for 12 weeks. However, after an initial six weeks of treatment, the timing and delivery of the audio and tongue stimuli were changed for participants of the TENT-A2 trial for their remaining six weeks of treatment. In TENT-A1, the stimulation setting remained the same for the full 12 weeks of treatment. This change in treatment regimen resulted in a greater average reduction in tinnitus symptom severity achieved by treatment compliant participants 1,4,5.

The study was conducted at the Wellcome Trust-HRB Clinical Research Facility, St James’s Hospital, Dublin, Ireland with no treatment-related Serious Adverse Events (SAEs) reported and a high treatment compliance. Out of 191 enrolled participants, 83.8% used the device at or above the minimum compliance level over the 12-week treatment period1.

When treatment was completed, participants returned their devices and were assessed at three follow-up appointments up to 12 months. 70.3% of the 172 participants who filled out the exit survey said they had benefited from using the treatment and 87.8% said they would recommend other people with tinnitus to try the treatment1.

Participants were screened and selected based on a pre-defined list of inclusion and exclusion criteria that enrolled a representative sample of the wider tinnitus population. Further information about the criteria can be found using identifier NCT03530306 at: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov.

Speaking on the news, Dr Ross O’Neill, Founding CEO of Neuromod said, “We’re delighted to announce the publication of positive results from the TENT-A2 clinical trial which show greater improvement in tinnitus symptoms from treatment with Lenire. Tinnitus remains one of the largest unmet clinical needs globally and I’m proud that Neuromod is at the forefront of developing bimodal neuromodulation technology to treat chronic tinnitus. Publishing two large-scale clinical trials in internationally-recognized peer-reviewed journals with positive results for a tinnitus treatment device is a historic milestone, and we’re committed to continuing our research in this area to further improve patient outcomes.”

Hubert Lim, Chief Scientific Officer at Neuromod, said, “I am proud of our company’s ability to build on our prior research by enrolling 191 participants in another large-scale clinical trial that showed even greater improvements in tinnitus symptoms compared to our previous large-scale study when adjusting the stimulation regimen over time. The successful completion of two large-scale trials is a major milestone in our continuing work to develop a treatment to help as many people living with tinnitus and in further demonstrating bimodal neuromodulation as a safe and effective intervention for people living with the condition.”

References

  1. Conlon B, Hamilton C, Meade E, et al. Different bimodal neuromodulation settings reduce tinnitus symptoms in a large randomized trial. Sci Rep. 2022;12(10845).
  2. Baguely D, McFerran D, Hall, D. Tinnitus. The Lancet. 2013;382(9904):1600-1607.
  3. McCormack A, Edmondson-Jones, M, Somerset S, Hall D. A systematic review of the reporting of tinnitus prevalence and severity. Hear Res. 2016;337:70–79.
  4. Conlon B, Langguth B, Hamilton C, et al. Bimodal neuromodulation combining sound and tongue stimulation reduces tinnitus symptoms in a large randomized clinical study. Sci Transl Med. 2020;12(564).
  5. As measured by Tinnitus Handicap Inventory (THI).

Source: Neuromod

Images: Neuromod