A new study sheds light on why some adults develop hearing problems.
By some estimates, hearing loss affects at least 50% of the population after 75 years of age.
While congenital hearing impairment—usually presenting in childhood—results from rare mutations, hearing problems in adults are likely due to the cumulative effect of polygenic risk and environmental factors.
Recent genome-wide association studies have uncovered several risk genes implicated in hearing issues in adults, however some factors still have not adequately been investigated by large-scale genetic studies.
For instance, there is limited information about why hearing problems among older adults are more common, more severe, and with earlier onset in men than in women. It is uncertain how hearing-related polygenic risk translates among people of diverse ancestral backgrounds.
While environmental risk factors such as noise exposure and tobacco smoking are known to increase the risk of hearing impairment, the molecular mechanisms underlying these associations are unclear.
The new study, published in Genome Medicine, greatly expands the understanding of a person’s predisposition to age-related hearing problems.
Researchers sampled nearly 750,000 adults and identified 54 risk variants—including 12 novel variants—that could contribute to hearing problems. They also highlighted how hormonal regulation may play a role in the differences between hearing problems in men and women.
Analyzing multiple ancestry groups, the researchers demonstrated that polygenic risk in hearing problems is shared across human populations. They also determined genes involved in brain development interact with sex, noise pollution, and tobacco smoking in relation to their associations with hearing problems.
“Our results support that large-scale genetic studies are useful instruments to understand the biology and the epidemiology of hearing problems in adults,” says senior author Renato Polimanti, associate professor of psychiatry at Yale School of Medicine.
Overall, the findings contribute to identifying possible molecular targets for drug development and define novel strategies to identify older adults at risk of losing their hearing.
The study could lead to changes in how older adults with hearing problems are assessed and treated. Hearing loss can impair communications, and that can result in social isolation with major health, psychosocial, and economic consequences, reducing the quality of life of those affected.
Additional coauthors are from Harvard University; the University of California, San Diego; and Yale. The National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders funded the work.
Source: Christopher Gardner for Yale University