- Sep 8, 2022
- 50
- Tinnitus Since
- 11/2020
- Cause of Tinnitus
- loud noise/construction
Great work with the updates.These are my notes from Dr. Shore's presentation. For more comprehensive updates, see: Palm Springs Hearing Seminar December 2022: Coverage.
The device produces a 50% reduction in tinnitus volume after 6 weeks and 75% reduction after 12 weeks. Furthermore, there is no return to baseline after using the device longer. In the previous trial where the device was used for only 4 weeks, there was a return to baseline.
They will investigate using the device to treat non-somatic and other forms of tinnitus after it's been released. These results are only for somatic tinnitus sufferers (of which I am one).
A company's been formed, Auricle Inc, to market and sell the device. And they are in talks with the FDA to get the device approved. They have an FDA expert on the team helping them get the device approved. She would not give an estimate for the device to be released. Saying only that everything depends on FDA approval.
However, FDA approval for devices is not like approval for a medication. Devices are approved in 6 months or less unlike medications which take 10-15 years or longer.
This is everything I could have hoped for and then some!
I've asked Dr. Shore if her latest study was published. And this is what she had to say:
"Up to 6 months" could mean that it could take less time of course, and that it probably won't be longer than that.Dr. Shore said:No, it will be submitted for publication next week. It will take up to 6 months.
I could be wrong, but I believe that FDA approval may be dependent on that happening (at least in Dr. Shore's case). She's also stated in the past that they would have to publish their findings before they "move towards commercialization" (her words). So it's likely we have some more time to wait. However, what we've learned today was fantastic! And this process will keep moving forward, we'll have to muster as much patience as we can while this situation develops.
"Furthermore, there is no return to baseline after using the device longer." This is unbelievable and something I didn't think was even possible. I hope this is true, I hope it works for all of us, and I hope the device doesn't lose any quality when it is mass produced.
And, I hope Dr. Shore and everyone else who worked on this ends up being a millionaire many times over. I hope whoever at the National Institute of Health wrote her a check to support her research gets promoted. And, I hope more Americans see the value of the NIH and the research it funds.
In 2012, the VA paid out $1.5 billion in disability compensation to over 971,000 veterans for tinnitus alone. If this works, it will save the US Government a huge sum of money each year and directly benefit so many vets (in addition to musician, concert goers, and so on).
Finally, I don't plan on getting a tattoo, but assuming that this works and the device isn't like $100K or something, I'll buy two and donate a device to someone who couldn't afford one on their own.