@amandine
i spoke today with the AM101 trial doctor:
1. think it is designed for anyone with T, of any loudness/intrusiveness level
2. forgot to ask. i'd look at the scientific papers. there are a few cases of 'clinically significant' hearing loss. no cases of going deaf.
3. I asked about this: the doctor I spoke to says he's not at all worried the drug/procedure increases T, however he thinks it is possible people end up thinking their T is louder because they are asked to fill in a diary and they therefore end up focusing on their T all the time. He thinks cases of increased T post treatment are essentially induced by the patient's increased focus on T
4. didn't ask
5. they said this is a possibility but he said he isn't 'worried about it' because the needle is so small. he says the procedure involving injection is rather standard and not high risk.
6. didn't ask
7. no one knows. they haven't tested this. all they know is that if you treat rats with AM101 4 days after you give them noise induced tinnitus, the rats are cured. No one has any idea if that means it will work in humans, let alone what a 4 day time frame in the case of rats translates to in human terms. In the paper on the efficacy of the second AM101 trial they say in the last paragraph that the 3 month window is 'arbitrary anyway' and therefore AM101 should be tested over longer timeframes. Basically no one knows.
In terms of eligibility, you need to have T that is constant, not induced by infection, not be pregnant, not be on drugs (at least, not within 2 weeks of having the blood test, which is during the appointment just before the 1st injection.... there is an initial consultative appointment before that where they give you a diary device to fill out but where there is no blood test) and no history of mental illness in the last 6 months (at least, these are all the criteria I remember from our conversation)