The median age at treatment start was 50 years (range, 13-68). Forty-seven % of skull base tumors were Chordoma, 29.4 % Chondrosarcoma, 5.9 % Meningioma, and 17.7% head and neck cancers.
Patients received a mean tumor dose of 71.1 Gy (RBE) (range, 52-77.8) and a mean cochlear dose of 37 Gy (RBE) (range, 0.03-72.7).
After a median follow up of 11 months (2-107,), 16 patients (31%) had an unchanged hearing ability, 11 (22%) patients presented with mild hearing loss 15-25 dB (CTCAE Grade 1) and 24 patients (47%) a hearing loss >25 dB (CTCAE Grade > 2), respectively. No improved hearing ability was recorded.
The analysis of the PTA for each ear before the start of PBS-PT revealed that 65 ears had a normal hearing threshold of < 20 dB (excellent-good) but in 37 ears hearing was already moderate to severe impaired (35-95 dB) and one patient even had a complete hearing loss in one ear (>95 dB).
Median PTA for all ears was 15 dB (IQR 15) and increased after PBS-PT to 23.7 dB (IQR 35) indicating a hearing impairment.
In 35 patients, the hearing test also included information on bone conduction allowing determining the type of hearing loss. Sensorineural (43%) or mixed (40%) hearing loss was the most common cause for hearing deterioration.
In the linear mixed effect model, mean cochlear dose (p<0.01), baseline PTA (p<0.01), age (p=0.03), and time after PBS-PS (p<0.01) could be identified as significant negative factors influencing hearing function.