
Bridgitte Harley
Published on:
24 Jun 2024
Groundbreaking surgery restores toddler’s hearing

Groundbreaking surgery restores toddler’s hearing
After a 16-minute surgical procedure, 18-month-old Opal Sandy now has near-normal hearing. The toddler, from Oxfordshire, had her hearing restored as part of a pioneering gene therapy trial.
Opal was born with auditory neuropathy, which disrupts nerve impulses between the inner ear and the brain, thought to be the cause of a faulty gene.
During the surgery at Addenbrooke’s hospital in Cambridge, Opal received an infusion containing a working copy of the gene, and can now hear almost perfectly.
The outcome follows decades of work to reach a solution that worked in humans, and the therapy was developed by biotech firm, Regeneron.
The trial will run in three parts, with three deaf children, including Opal, receiving a low dose of gene therapy in one ear. (Since Opal’s surgery, another child has received the gene therapy and has experienced positive results.) Another three children will get a high dose on one side. If that is shown to be safe, more children will receive a dose in both ears at the same time. Some 18 children will be recruited to the trial from across the UK and worldwide, and all will be followed up for five years.
You can read more about this amazing work here:
https://www.cuh.nhs.uk/news/baby-born-deaf-can-hear-after-breakthrough-gene-therapy/
2018 UK Audiologist of the Year
Bridgitte Harley
Director & Audiologist
Bridgitte is an award-winning audiologist with over 25 years’ experience, including senior NHS roles, UCL lecturing, and international recognition from the Ida Institute.
She’s the founder of The Hearing Clinic, the UK’s first to receive the prestigious Inspired by Ida label for Person Centred Care.
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