By Caroline Copley and Ben Hirschler                
ZURICH/LONDON, Dec 2 (Reuters) - When Swiss biotech firm  Auris Medical wanted to recruit patients to test its  experimental hearing loss drug, it decided to enlist partygoers  deafened by firecrackers on New Year's Eve.                
In the weeks leading up to Dec. 31, 2005 it advertised in  the subway and on radio stations in Munich and Berlin, urging  victims of sudden firecracker-induced hearing loss to turn up at  designated clinics for treatment on January 1.                
"We had just one single day of enrolment, we didn't know how  many people would show up," Thomas Meyer, managing director of  Auris, told Reuters.                
Luckily, his gamble paid off and the small private company  is now one of the leaders in what has been an empty space for  the pharmaceutical industry.                
Auris managed to recruit enough people to show that its  compound AM-111 posed no safety risk and has since successfully  completed a mid-stage trial in acute sensorineural hearing loss,  or sudden deafness, involving 210 patients.                
While there is no guarantee that its drug, which is injected  through the eardrum, will pass muster in final-stage tests, the  progress by Auris and a clutch of rival biotech firms is making  large pharmaceutical companies sit up and take notice.                
There are currently no approved disease-modifying drugs  for hearing loss, which affects nearly a third of people aged 65  to 74 and half of those over 75.                
But the science is developing and investor interest is  growing, piqued by the huge commercial success of recent new  treatments for sight loss, such as Lucentis from Novartis   and Roche and Eylea from Regeneron   and Bayer.                
British charity Action on Hearing Loss conservatively puts  the potential Western market for new drugs at $4.6 billion a  year - a figure that could grow quickly as ageing populations  swell the ranks of those with hearing problems.                
NEGLECTED FIELD                
"It's one of the few areas that, as yet, hasn't really been  tackled by the drugs industry," said Kate Bingham, managing  partner at SV Life Sciences Advisers, a venture capital firm  with investments in new drugs for both eyes and ears.                
Bingham sits on the board of Autifony Therapeutics - a  hearing loss firm spun out of GlaxoSmithKline in which  the British drugmaker retains a stake.                
Historically, hearing loss has received little attention  from Big Pharma, given the lack of obvious targets for drug  intervention, the difficulties of running clinical trials and a  widespread belief that most deafness could not be reversed.                
Now the big companies are getting involved, although the  work is early-stage.                
"A drug that is therapeutic and priced right could be quite  a blockbuster. That's why they've put their toe in the water,"  said Jonathan Kil, chief medical officer at Seattle-based Sound  Pharmaceuticals, which is enrolling young iPod users in a trial  of an oral drug for noise-induced hearing loss.                
U.S. giant Pfizer is arguably the most advanced of  the big players, with a drug in initial Phase I clinical testing  trial for age-related sensorineural hearing loss that looks to  enhance the function of existing hair cells.                
Some of its biggest rivals are laying bets, too. Last year  French drugmaker Sanofi inked a two-year research deal  with privately held Dutch biotech firm Audion Therapeutics to  develop small molecule drugs to improve hearing.                
In October, Roche joined forces with venture capital firm  Versant Ventures and biotech Inception Sciences to find  molecules targeting ear hair cell protection and regeneration in  the cochlea, the spiral-shaped cavity in the inner ear.                
Cross-town competitor Novartis, meanwhile, struck a 2010  deal potentially worth more than $213 million with U.S. biotech  GenVec to develop gene-based treatments to replace hair  cells in the ear that transmit sound.                
"We're looking at restoration as our main line of work and  we're interested in whether there are chemicals that might also  play this role instead of having to introduce a gene," said  Novartis research head Mark Fishman.                
"This is an area that's a bit more futuristic and ultimately  restoring the hair cells will be the cure."                
EYES AND EARS                
Unlike new eye drugs, which work by inhibiting an unwanted  process, hearing drugs will need to restore damaged function - a  more difficult proposition.                
Experts say the first drugs will target niche areas, such as  damage caused by loud noise or as a result of chemotherapy.                
"Hearing loss is not just one condition. It's like cancer -  there are lots of different types and there is work to be done  to segment the market," said Ralph Holme, head of biomedical  research at Action on Hearing Loss.                
Heading the field for noise-induced hearing loss is South  Illinois University, which has launched a late-stage trial with  the U.S. military for an drug to increase protection for people  exposed to very noisy environments like soldiers.                
Canada's Adherex also has a late-stage trial to  test a drug that may protect against hearing loss caused by  platinum-based anti-cancer agents in children.                
While protective treatments could become available within  the next few years, regenerative approaches - such as injecting  stem cells into the ear or chemically intervening to switch on  genes that control cell growth - are much further off.                
Despite recent promising tests in gerbils, the potential to  replicate this in humans is still uncertain, said Pascal Senn,  an ear specialist at the University of Berne.                
"If something grows inside the ear, you must be sure that it  doesn't grow excessively or form tumours. There are a lot of  roadblocks that need to be overcome in this field. It's highly  risky, but I think it's also the hottest area," he said.                
One intriguing possibility for the future is the convergence  of future drugs and devices. Hearing aid manufacturers have  certainly not been deaf to the noises from the pharma sector.                
Sonova, the world's largest maker of hearing aids,  has invested in two start-up companies - one in the United  States for drugs to protect hearing and another Swiss biotech  working on a treatment for acute tinnitus.                
It bought U.S. cochlear implant manufacturer Advanced  Bionics in 2009 in a bid to increase its focus on the inner ear  and understand how drug treatments could work with implants.                
"It will be interesting whether the innovation will be  driven by pharma companies moving in or whether the hearing aid  companies will branch out," said Auris' Meyer.     (Editing by Philippa Fletcher)
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