Tinnitus risk factors and its evolution over time: a cohort study

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Abstract

Background

Subjective tinnitus is an auditory percept unrelated to an external sound source. The lack of curative treatments and limited understanding of its risk factors complicate the prevention and management of this distressing symptom. This study seeks to identify socio-demographic, psychological, and health-related risk factors predicting tinnitus presence (how often individuals perceive tinnitus) and severity separately, and their evolution over time.

Methods

Using the UK Biobank dataset which encompasses data on the socio-demographic, physical, mental and hearing health from more than 170,000 participants, we trained two distinct machine learning models to identify risk scores predicting tinnitus presence and severity separately. These models were used to predict tinnitus over time and were replicated in 463 individuals from the Tinnitus Research Initiative database.

Finding

Machine learning based approach identified hearing health as a primary risk factor for the presence and severity of tinnitus, while mood, neuroticism, hearing health, and sleep only predicted tinnitus severity. Only the severity model accurately predicted the evolution over nine years, with a large effect size for individuals developing severe tinnitus (Cohen’s d = 1.10, AUC-ROC = 0.70). To facilitate its clinical applications, we simplified the severity model and validated a five-item questionnaire to detect individuals at risk of developing severe tinnitus.

Interpretation

This study is the first to clearly identify risk factors predicting tinnitus presence and severity separately. Hearing health emerges as a major predictor of tinnitus presence, while mental health plays a crucial role in its severity. The successful prediction of the evolution of tinnitus severity over nine years based on socio-emotional, hearing and sleep factors suggests that modifying these factors could mitigate the impact of tinnitus. The newly developed questionnaire represents a significant advancement in identifying individuals at risk of severe tinnitus, for which early supportive care would be crucial.

Funding

Horizon Europe Marie Slodowska-Curie Actions, the Fondation des gueules cassées, the Fondation pour l’Audition, the Louise and Alan Edwards Foundation, the Canadian Institutes Health Research, the Institut TransMedTech and the Canada First Research Excellence Fund.

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