Sounds extremely promising, but also after 22 years of tinnitus I've learned to manage my expectations
Yeah,
@Brian Newman and
@attheedgeofscience's posts (
former/
latter) sum the situation up quite well. Anyone not
just discovering aural illness and this community, will have every reason to be extremely pessimistic and nonplussed by sensational claims relating to tinnitus and hearing loss treatments, from this point on.
That said, where's the fun in that?
My personals position: I'm not going anywhere, and I haven't really been excited by news of a drug or procedure that might help tinnitus and hyperacusis since the days of
Auris Medical.
So I'll just continue to
live as if no cavalry are ever arriving, while stubbornly continuing to hope, and contribute to, the far-fetched notion that one day I can pop a pill or take an injection (in the ear) that allows me to leave my apartment without hearing protection on (or even better: never have to listen to
the glass orchestra playing in my head again).
I'm 5 weeks into a spike after a moderate noise blast from headphones (I have to use them for work as a video editor). I'm still hoping it's just a spike and not chronic though, as I've gone through this exact experience before. My (3?) tinnitus tones are just louder and more intrusive, but I can't hear any new tones. Hyperacusis is back up too which is the most annoying part. Hearing aids are helping some, but not as much as they did initially, although that might be because of the spike at the moment. Noxacusis goes down by about 20-30% when I put them in, while it used to go down by 80%.
Ah, sorry to hear this.
If it's any comfort, I have also had tinnitus for a while now (19 years) - although I only advertise the last 13 in my profile (because 2009 is when I began
suffering) - and my experience in that time has been that the odd sound exposure (that occurs when you drop the ball while taking necessary precaution) does not result in a
permanent worsening all that frequently.
Do you know if there's any information about upcoming trials?
Latest news on their website shows completion of Phase 1 Trials for
ACOU085 (the otoprotective drug used alongside cancer medication) ▼
"Completing Phase 1 with ACOU085 is another fundamental milestone towards our disruptive goal of making sensorineural hearing loss a druggable disease," said Chief Executive Officer Tim Bölke.
The next step is a clinical Phase 2 study using ACOU085 to protect the inner ears of testicular cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy from cisplatin-induced ototoxicity. It will be initiated in early 2023.
But nothing regarding
ACOU082 (the one I'm interested in), besides what
@InNeedOfHelp already posted.
I
have sent them an email
politely requesting that if they have the time, could they please give us some further information about what's going on with it (although I don't expect anything back soon).
I'll let you know if/when I receive something.
@InNeedOfHelp,
@Hazel: do you know if it's possible to read / watch their presentation from the conference anywhere?