Not much, and for me that's the problem. Anything "CPU" or "GPU" gets dissected in minute detail by over a dozen of the usual tech sites. Yet the inability / unwillingness of literally any of the same tech sites to do even basic data retention or longer term performance tests (not just SSD's but USB sticks too) leaves a "deafening silence"...
I also don't see monthly data rewriting as a "fix" that actually solves the problem. At best it's a cheap workaround that hides it by massively reducing (already lower) real-world available P/E cycles (first by having to use an SLC cache to hide TLC's lower native performance whilst larger 500GB-1TB MLC drives write directly in one go), then having to constantly monitor the age of and then rewrite older TLC data due to having far lower overhead between 8 voltage states vs 4). This further widens the MLC vs TLC endurance gap far disproportionately to the barely 20% price difference. Even Anandtech's review technique of constantly writing over a period of days until life left in % drops by 1% then calculating "predicted endurance" hides the issue. And yet again, they don't even touch data retention, powered or unpowered.
Best case : Unpowered data retention isn't an issue. But I'll be more happy when I actually see someone take half a dozen TLC drives, image them with a load of CRC checksummed files, put them in a drawer for 6 months then test both speed & data accuracy. Then wipe clean and repeat with 12 months. SSD's are one of the reasons I've lost all faith in the common sense of modern tech review sites and their "storage experts" seeming unwillingness to do any serious testing beyond copy & pasting PR snippets from the manufacturer.