Cognitive Outcomes After Cochlear Implantation in Older Adults: A Narrative Review of Current Evidence, Mechanisms, and Long-Term Perspectives
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Mechanistic Rationale: Why Cochlear Implantation May Affect Cognition
3.2. Cognitive Outcomes After Cochlear Implantation
- (i)
- Cognitive assessment tools and comparability across studies
- (ii)
- Systematic reviews and meta-analyses
- (iii)
- Prospective studies
- (iv)
- Long-term cognitive trajectories
3.3. Cognition, Cochlear Implant Performance, and Pre-Existing Cognitive Impairment
4. Discussion
4.1. Rehabilitation Considerations in Older Cochlear Implant Recipients
4.2. Methodological Limitations and Future Directions
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
| CI | Cochlear Implant |
| HL | Hearing Loss |
| SNHL | Sensorineural Hearing Loss |
| NCIQ | Nijmegen Cochlear Implant Questionnaire |
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| Study | Design | Population/Sample | CI-Related Details Reported | Comparator | Follow-Up | Cognitive Assessment/Focus | Main Findings | Key Limitations/Interpretative Issues |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vandenbroeke et al., 2025 [8] | Narrative review | Older adult cochlear implant population | Not applicable; review-level evidence | Not applicable | Not applicable | Current evidence and future perspectives on cognition after cochlear implantation | Summarized evidence on cognition after cochlear implantation in older adults, emphasizing methodological heterogeneity, auditory bias in cognitive testing, and need for standardized hearing-adapted protocols. | Narrative design; no quantitative synthesis; conclusions depend on heterogeneity of included studies. |
| Claes et al., 2018 [13] | Systematic review | 166 older cochlear implant recipients across 6 longitudinal studies | CI details varied across included studies; specific device/surgical characteristics not summarized in the present review | Limited or variable across included studies | Variable | Multiple cognitive tests | Most included studies reported postoperative cognitive improvement, but evidence was considered inconclusive. | Small samples, lack of control groups, practice effects, and limited use of hearing-adapted cognitive tools. |
| Amini et al., 2023 [14] | Systematic review and meta-analysis | Adult cochlear implant users | CI details varied across included studies; specific implantation characteristics not summarized in the present review | Variable across included studies | Variable | MMSE, MoCA, Trail Making Test, and other cognitive measures | Approximately half of reported cognitive outcomes improved after cochlear implantation; pooled analyses showed significant improvements in MMSE, MoCA, and Trail Making Test-B. | Heterogeneous cognitive tools, follow-up intervals, and outcome definitions; pooled estimates limited by variability of primary studies. |
| An et al., 2023 [15] | Systematic review and meta-analysis | 648 older cochlear implant recipients from 20 longitudinal studies | CI details varied across included studies; specific implantation characteristics not summarized in the present review | Variable across included studies | 6–12 months | Global cognition, executive function, verbal and non-verbal memory | Executive function and verbal memory improved within 6 months; global cognition and non-verbal memory showed clearer improvement at 12 months. | Limited by heterogeneity of included studies, short-to-medium follow-up, and variable cognitive outcome measures. |
| Amini et al., 2024 [16] | Scoping review and meta-analysis | Adult cochlear implant users | CI details varied across included studies; specific implantation characteristics not summarized in the present review | Variable across included studies | Variable | Relationship between cognition and cochlear implant speech outcomes | Global cognition and inhibition-concentration were most consistently associated with postoperative speech recognition; verbal fluency also showed significant association. | Heterogeneity in cognitive measures, speech materials, and quiet versus noise testing conditions. |
| Villarreal-Garza & Callejón-Leblic, 2025 [17] | Scoping review | Studies evaluating neuropsychological assessment after cochlear implantation | Not applicable; focused on assessment tools rather than implantation variables | Not applicable | Not applicable | Cognitive assessment tools and methodological issues | Highlighted heterogeneity of cognitive instruments and need for hearing-adapted, visually presented, or non-auditory cognitive assessment tools. | Scoping review design; does not provide formal effect estimates; emphasizes methodological mapping rather than outcome synthesis. |
| Claes et al., 2018 [18] | Prospective longitudinal cohort study | Severely hearing-impaired older adults undergoing cochlear implantation | 20 older adults, median age 71.5 years, undergoing unilateral CI; post-activation auditory rehabilitation offered. | No control group reported in the present narrative synthesis | 12 months | RBANS-H | Significant improvement in total cognitive score after cochlear implantation, mainly driven by immediate and delayed memory. | Preliminary cohort evidence; absence of control group limits separation of treatment effect from practice effects or natural variability. |
| Völter et al., 2018 [9] | Prospective cohort study | Aging cochlear implant recipients | 60 adults aged 50–84 years with severe-to-profound bilateral hearing impairment undergoing unilateral CI. | No control group reported in the present narrative synthesis | 6–12 months | ALAcog visually presented cognitive battery | Improvements in attention, inhibition, working memory, and delayed recall at 6 months; verbal fluency improved later at 12 months. | Cohort design; limited control for practice effects; comparability restricted by use of a specific cognitive battery. |
| Sarant et al., 2019 [19] | Prospective international longitudinal study | Older adults with severe-to-profound hearing loss undergoing cochlear implantation | Older adults undergoing CI; detailed device/surgical characteristics not reported in the present summary | No control group reported in the present narrative synthesis | 18 months | Visually presented Cogstate battery | Speech perception, communication ability, and quality of life improved; cognition remained stable in most participants, with executive function improving in a subgroup. | Subgroup findings require caution; absence of a matched untreated control group limits causal interpretation. |
| Mertens et al., 2021 [10] | Prospective longitudinal controlled multicenter study | Older cochlear implant users compared with matched hearing-impaired controls | Older CI users; detailed device/surgical characteristics not reported in the present summary | Matched hearing-impaired controls without cochlear implantation | 14 months | RBANS-H | CI was associated with improvement in RBANS-H total score and particularly in attention compared with controls; memory improvements were less robust after control comparison. | Stronger design due to control group, but still limited by follow-up duration and potential residual confounding. |
| Gurgel et al., 2022 [20] | Prospective cohort study | Adults aged ≥65 years undergoing cochlear implantation | Adults ≥65 undergoing CI; detailed device/surgical characteristics not reported in the present summary | No control group reported in the present narrative synthesis | 12 months | Verbal and visually based cognitive tasks | Improvements in attention, executive function, verbal learning and memory, and working memory; benefits appeared marked among participants with preoperative cognitive impairment. | Cohort design; findings in cognitively impaired participants require cautious interpretation because regression to the mean and practice effects may contribute. |
| Völter et al., 2022 [21] | Prospective cohort/cognitive reserve study | Adult cochlear implant recipients | Adult CI recipients; detailed device/surgical characteristics not reported in the present summary | Not reported in the present narrative synthesis | Postoperative follow-up | Cognitive reserve and cognitive performance measures | Cognitive reserve was associated with cognitive performance before and after implantation; greater cognitive improvement was observed in recipients with lower cognitive reserve and poorer baseline cognition. | Cognitive reserve effects may be influenced by baseline differences, regression to the mean, and heterogeneity in patient characteristics. |
| Völter et al., 2022 [22] | Longitudinal follow-up study | Adult cochlear implant recipients | Adult CI recipients; detailed device/surgical characteristics not reported in the present summary | Not reported in the present narrative synthesis | Up to approximately 65 months | Multiple cognitive domains | Improvements in attention, delayed recall, working memory, verbal fluency, and inhibition, with most gains occurring during the first postoperative year and then remaining broadly stable. | Long-term follow-up is informative but may be affected by attrition, practice effects, and lack of robust external control. |
| Völter et al., 2023 [23] | Longitudinal trajectory study | Middle-aged and older people with hearing loss using cochlear implants | CI users; detailed device/surgical characteristics not reported in the present summary | Not reported in the present narrative synthesis | Longitudinal follow-up | Memory trajectories | Memory trajectories suggested early postoperative improvement followed by plateau or decline after approximately two years, supporting a “cognitive booster” rather than dementia-prevention interpretation. | Memory-specific trajectories may not generalize to all cognitive domains; long-term interpretation limited by cohort design and attrition. |
| Sarant et al., 2024 [11] | Prospective longitudinal cohort study/COCHLEA study | 101 CI participants, older adults, with hearing loss and cochlear implants compared with AIBL participants | CI use and daily device-use analysis reported; higher daily use, at least 14 h/day, associated with earlier and greater cognitive improvement | AIBL comparison cohort | 4.5 years | Multiple cognitive domains; device-use analysis | CI users showed improvement in executive function and working memory and stability in other domains; AIBL participants worsened in attention and psychomotor function; higher device use associated with earlier and greater cognitive improvement. | External comparison cohort may differ from CI cohort in baseline characteristics, hearing status, motivation, and assessment context; device-use association does not prove causality. |
| Vandenbroeke et al., 2025 [12] | Prospective longitudinal study | Older adults undergoing cochlear implantation | Older adults undergoing CI; detailed device/surgical characteristics not reported in the present summary | No control group reported in the present narrative synthesis | Up to 4 years | RBANS-H | RBANS-H total score, immediate memory, attention, and delayed memory improved at 1 year; global cognitive improvement was no longer significant at 4 years, whereas auditory and quality-of-life benefits remained more durable. | Long-term findings limited by attrition and absence of a control group; global cognitive benefit may attenuate over time. |
| Dawes et al., 2024 [24] | Scoping review | Cochlear implant recipients with cognitive impairment, mild cognitive impairment, or dementia | CI recipients with cognitive impairment; specific implantation details varied and are not summarized in the present review | Variable across included studies | Variable | Auditory and cognitive outcomes in cognitively impaired recipients | Speech recognition generally improved after cochlear implantation in cognitively impaired recipients, although benefits may be smaller than in cognitively healthy users; cognitive impairment should not be considered an automatic exclusion criterion. | Evidence base is limited; data on long-term device use, non-use, adverse events, caregiver outcomes, and cognitive outcomes remain insufficient. |
| Mamo et al., 2018 [25] | Systematic review | Older adults with cognitive impairment receiving hearing loss treatment | Broader hearing loss treatment; not limited to cochlear implantation | Variable across included studies | Variable | Hearing loss treatment, cognition, communication, quality of life, behavioral symptoms | Hearing loss treatment may improve communication, quality of life, and dementia-related behavioral symptoms, but evidence for direct cognitive improvement remained insufficient. | Broader hearing rehabilitation review; applicability to CI-specific outcomes is indirect. |
| Carasek et al., 2022 [26] | Systematic review | Older adults using cochlear implants and/or hearing aids | Includes CI and/or hearing aid users; specific CI details not summarized in the present review | Variable across included studies | Variable | Cognition after auditory rehabilitation | Suggested possible cognitive benefit from hearing rehabilitation, including cochlear implants and hearing aids, but emphasized heterogeneity and need for stronger prospective evidence. | Mixed-device evidence; heterogeneity limits CI-specific conclusions. |
| Cognitive Tool/Battery | Main Cognitive Domains Assessed | Administration Modality | Hearing-Adapted or Visually Presented? | Practical Feasibility | Main Limitations in Older CI Candidates/Users | Use in the Cited Literature * |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MMSE | Global cognition; orientation; memory; attention; language | Mostly oral, with some written/visuospatial components | No | Very easy to administer; widely available; familiar to clinicians | Limited sensitivity to mild cognitive impairment; ceiling effects; potential auditory and language bias in severely hearing-impaired patients | Reported in meta-analytic evidence [14] |
| MoCA | Global cognition; executive function; attention; memory; language; visuospatial function | Oral and paper-based tasks | No, unless adapted | Easy to administer; more sensitive than MMSE for mild cognitive impairment | Auditory-verbal components may underestimate cognition before implantation; language and education effects; not CI-specific | Reported in meta-analytic evidence [14] |
| MoCA-HI | Global cognition adapted for hearing-impaired individuals | Written/visual adaptation of MoCA | Yes | Clinically feasible; useful screening option for hearing-impaired adults | Less frequently used in CI outcome studies; mainly a screening tool rather than a full neuropsychological battery | Discussed as a future methodological option [17] |
| RBANS-H | Immediate memory; visuospatial/constructional function; language; attention; delayed memory | Hearing-adapted neuropsychological battery | Yes | More comprehensive than MMSE/MoCA; suitable for hearing-impaired adults; used in longitudinal CI studies | Longer than screening tools; practice effects remain possible; requires trained administration and interpretation | At least 3 primary studies [10,12,18] |
| ALAcog battery | Attention; inhibition; working memory; delayed recall; verbal fluency | Visually presented cognitive battery | Yes | Reduces auditory bias; allows domain-specific assessment | Less widely available than standard screening tools; comparability with other studies may be limited | Reported in Völter et al. and related longitudinal studies [9,21,22,23] |
| Cogstate battery | Executive function; attention; psychomotor speed; visual learning/memory; working memory | Computerized, visually presented tasks | Yes | Standardized and repeatable; suitable for longitudinal studies; reduces auditory dependence | Requires familiarity with computerized testing; visual/motor speed may influence performance in older adults | At least 2 studies from the Sarant/COCHLEA cohort [11,19] |
| Trail Making Test A | Processing speed; visual scanning; attention | Paper-based visual task | Yes, largely non-auditory after instructions | Quick and easy; useful for attention/processing speed | Influenced by visual acuity, motor speed, education, and familiarity with paper-pencil tasks | Reported in meta-analytic evidence [14] |
| Trail Making Test B | Executive function; cognitive flexibility; set-shifting; attention | Paper-based visual task | Yes, largely non-auditory after instructions | Quick and clinically familiar; useful executive measure | Influenced by processing speed, visual acuity, motor function, education; practice effects possible | Reported in meta-analytic evidence [14] |
| Verbal fluency tests | Lexical retrieval; semantic memory; executive control; language | Oral verbal production task | Partially; task output is oral but not dependent on hearing stimuli after instructions | Simple, fast, and widely used | Language, education, and speech production effects; limited comparability across languages; not purely non-auditory | Reported in studies/reviews evaluating CI outcomes [9,14,16,22] |
| Inhibition/concentration tasks | Inhibitory control; selective attention; executive function | Variable; paper-based or computerized depending on study | Variable | Useful for executive-domain assessment; relevant to speech perception outcomes | Heterogeneous tasks across studies; limited standardization; may reduce comparability | Reported in systematic/meta-analytic evidence [14,16] |
| Working memory tasks | Short-term memory; manipulation of information; attentional control | Variable; visual, oral, or computerized depending on study | Variable | Relevant to speech understanding and CI outcomes | Test modality varies substantially; auditory-verbal versions may be biased in hearing-impaired patients | Reported across longitudinal studies and reviews [9,11,15,17] |
| Memory-specific tests/subtests | Immediate memory; delayed memory; verbal and/or visual learning | Variable depending on battery | Variable; better when visual/hearing-adapted | Important because memory is one of the most frequently investigated domains | Verbal memory tests may be confounded by audibility; visual memory tests may not be directly comparable with auditory-verbal memory measures | Reported across several longitudinal studies and reviews [11,12,15,18,20,23] |
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Share and Cite
Falchetta, L.; Scarpa, A.; Carucci, M.; Calvanese, M.; Savignano, L.; Bisogno, A.; Santis, C.D.; Montanino, A.; Criscuoli, C.; Salzano, F.A. Cognitive Outcomes After Cochlear Implantation in Older Adults: A Narrative Review of Current Evidence, Mechanisms, and Long-Term Perspectives. Audiol. Res. 2026, 16, 88. https://doi.org/10.3390/audiolres16030088
Falchetta L, Scarpa A, Carucci M, Calvanese M, Savignano L, Bisogno A, Santis CD, Montanino A, Criscuoli C, Salzano FA. Cognitive Outcomes After Cochlear Implantation in Older Adults: A Narrative Review of Current Evidence, Mechanisms, and Long-Term Perspectives. Audiology Research. 2026; 16(3):88. https://doi.org/10.3390/audiolres16030088
Chicago/Turabian StyleFalchetta, Luigi, Alfonso Scarpa, Mario Carucci, Matteo Calvanese, Luisa Savignano, Antonella Bisogno, Carla De Santis, Arianna Montanino, Caterina Criscuoli, and Francesco Antonio Salzano. 2026. "Cognitive Outcomes After Cochlear Implantation in Older Adults: A Narrative Review of Current Evidence, Mechanisms, and Long-Term Perspectives" Audiology Research 16, no. 3: 88. https://doi.org/10.3390/audiolres16030088
APA StyleFalchetta, L., Scarpa, A., Carucci, M., Calvanese, M., Savignano, L., Bisogno, A., Santis, C. D., Montanino, A., Criscuoli, C., & Salzano, F. A. (2026). Cognitive Outcomes After Cochlear Implantation in Older Adults: A Narrative Review of Current Evidence, Mechanisms, and Long-Term Perspectives. Audiology Research, 16(3), 88. https://doi.org/10.3390/audiolres16030088

