Objective: Genetic variants in the OTOF gene are responsible for non-syndromic hearing loss with an autosomal recessive inheritance pattern. The objective of our work was to evaluate the clinical characteristics of patients with biallelic pathogenic variants in OTOF and their evolution after treatment.
Methods: A cohort of 124 patients with prelingual hearing loss, studied from 1996 to 2023, was included in this study. A genetic analysis was conducted to identify the type and frequency of variants in the OTOF gene and their relation to the clinical characteristics of the patients.
Results: The homozygous p. Gln829* variant in the OTOF gene was detected in 3 probands (2.4 %) of a group of 124 individuals with prelingual hearing loss. Another 6 family members to a total of 9 individuals were finally included. All presented with severe/profound bilateral sensorineural hearing loss of congenital onset. Three of these individuals were diagnosed with auditory neuropathy spectrum disorder. One individual passed the OAE test during the screening program, and since he did not have risk factors for hearing loss that would warrant ABR testing, this led to a delay in his hearing loss diagnosis. Four individuals underwent cochlear implants (three bilateral) with good functional outcomes in three of them. However, in 17 familial cases with heterozygous variants, either no hearing loss was observed or it was within the expected range for their age.
Conclusions: Hearing loss secondary to the p.Gln829* variant of the OTOF gene is relatively rare in our medical area. Its presence in homozygosity is the cause of severe/profound bilateral prelingual sensorineural hearing loss, responsible for auditory neuropathy with a good response to cochlear implantation.
Keywords: Hereditary hearing loss; OTOF gene; Sensorineural hearing loss.
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