Hello everyone,
I haven't had a Tinnitus Talk account beforehand, but I was following this thread, and I was a bit disturbed by all the negativity that just spread after the release of this document with partial results from the clinical trial, so I decided to create an account and post my opinion here.
So, after a not-very-careful reading of that document, I only see
encouraging results. Let me explain...
1. The first thing I noticed is that, for ALL the patients that received the drug, the dose seems to be the same, but in different volumes (0.05 mL and 0.2 mL). What I mean is that those who received the 0.2 mL injection hadn't had more of the drug, but more of the vehicle substance, to increase the volume (probably in the eventuality that a higher volume would diffuse better in the cochlea). I say this because they state: "[...] similar results were obtained with both dose volumes. This is consistent with published work showing drug delivery to the cochlea depends more on the concentration of the drug than the volume of injection."
So, if I'm right, the actual drug dose was <0.05 mL, so a
really, really small dose.
2. In my opinion, even with that small dose, the results are simply spectacular. Keep in mind that the drug first reaches the high-frequency region of the cochlea; then, have a quick look at the patients' health profiles. Also, keep in mind that the audiometry scores were recorded only up to 8 kHz, so the really high frequencies were not included. Let's get to the patients profiles and word recognition (WR) scores: there were a few with mild SNHL and a few with moderate to moderately-severe SNHL. Those with mild SNHL probably had good WR scores already and good hearing up to 4-8 kHz, so leave those out. Six had worse SNHL *and* were also treated. Out of those six, four had
statistically significant improvements in WR. If you look at the numbers, they got approx. 100% improvement (some even more!). That's a damn good improvement for a very small dose in a safety study! [I would kill for 100% improvement in word recognition.]
And if you look at the aggregated results -- treated vs. placebo --, there's a 30% improvement. For me, that's more than acceptable.
They even stated that four of those six worse-SNHL-guys had a 10 dB improvement at 8 kHz and, if that's not due to chance, it's also spectacular.
3. It might be possible that not all the drug reaches the target supporting cells, especially since the dose was so small.
Maybe there would be more things to say, but I'll stop here.
To sum up, these results are exactly how I would expect them to be. You won't see a +50 dB improvement in audiometry scores at 0-8 kHz with less than 0.05 mL of the drug.
I have some hopes with this company and their drug. Just don't get too stressed and wait for the Phase 2 results.
Have a good day, guys!