Tom Dening
Professor of Dementia Research at the University of Nottingham
This is another interesting contribution to an important area of research. As hearing loss has been identified as a risk factor for the development of dementia, this has stimulated a lot of research into how hearing loss might cause dementia and also whether hearing interventions such as hearing aids might reduce this risk.
The paper by Cantuaria and colleagues examines a large sample of over half a million people from the Danish population who attended public hearing clinics. They compared people with and without hearing loss in terms of the rate of incident (new cases of) dementia over an average follow-up period of nearly 9 years. The main finding was that hearing loss was significantly associated with the later development of dementia, though the risk (hazard ratio) was lower than has been reported in some other influential studies. The risk was greater in people with more severe hearing loss. The authors also found that people with hearing loss who did not use hearing aids has a 20% higher risk of dementia than those with normal hearing. People who used hearing aids for their hearing loss did not have such a high risk (6%, which was only just significantly above the risk for normal hearing). This suggests that hearing aid use may help to protect against dementia. This finding is consistent with other studies.
The paper is strong because of the large sample size and the use of routinely gathered health data. Also, Denmark has the highest rate of hearing aid use among people with self-reported hearing loss, which makes it an interesting location for this study.
The main limitation is that this is an observational study, so there may well be differences between people who do and do not wear hearing aids, for example the actual cause of their hearing loss or other medical and social factors. Whether hearing aids help prevent dementia remains an open question. In some ways, the group who do not wear hearing aids are more interesting. Why don’t they do so, and is this related to the type of hearing loss that they experience?