Literature DB >> 23378777

Update on the management of chronic rhinosinusitis.

Rachel B Cain1, Devyani Lal.   

Abstract

Chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS) is a common disorder characterized by mucosal inflammation of the nose and paranasal sinuses with sinonasal symptoms persisting for greater than 12 weeks. The etiology of CRS is incompletely understood. Current understanding supports inflammation, rather than infection, as the dominant etiologic factor. CRS significantly impacts patients' quality of life and health care expenditure. There is no standard management of CRS. Treatment strategies differ based on divergent etiologies of the various CRS subclasses. Both systemic and topical agents are used. These interventions differ in CRS with nasal polyposis (CRSwNP), CRS without nasal polyposis (CRSsNP) and specific situations such as allergic fungal rhinosinusitis or aspirin-exacerbated respiratory disease. Antibiotics are the most commonly prescribed medication for CRS, but their role in management is not strongly supported by high-level studies. This paper provides a succinct review of the evidence supporting or refuting common therapeutic agents in the management of CRS. Novel and emerging strategies will also be discussed.

Entities:  

Keywords:  evidence-based; review; sinusitis

Year:  2013        PMID: 23378777      PMCID: PMC3558308          DOI: 10.2147/IDR.S26134

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Infect Drug Resist        ISSN: 1178-6973            Impact factor:   4.003


Introduction

Chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS) is diagnosed when specific sinonasal symptoms lasting 12 or more weeks are confirmed by nasal endoscopy or radiographic imaging (Figure 1).1 CRS is best considered as a group of heterogeneous disorders from a multitude of causes that result in mild to severe symptomatic inflammation of the sinonasal mucosa (Figure 2).2 The management of this complex and diverse disease is therefore a challenge. Much ongoing research is being directed toward the investigation of treatment strategies, as well as developing criteria for diagnosing the various CRS subsets. The most simplified classification divides CRS into those patients who have nasal polyps (CRSwNP) and those without (CRSsNP) (Figure 3).3
Figure 1

Diagnosis of CRS.

Note: © 2007 Sage Publications. Reproduced with permission from Rosenfeld RM, et al. Clinical practice guideline: adult sinusitis. Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 2007;137(3 Suppl)S1–S31.

Figure 2

Factors associated with CRS.

Note: © 2003 Sage Publications. Adapted with permission from Benninger M, et al. Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 2003;129(3 suppl):S1–S32.

Figure 3

CRS differentiation by inflammatory mediators.

Note: Data from Van Zele T, et al. Differentiation of chronic sinus diseases by measurement of inflammatory mediators. Allergy. 2006;61:1280–1289.

Medical therapy of CRS is a key strategy, with surgery playing a vital adjunctive role. Medical therapy is directed toward treatment of the underlying etiology, as well as the resultant inflammation. A variety of systemic and topical therapeutic agents are commonly employed. These include corticosteroids, antimicrobials, and immune modulating medications. As CRS is a chronic disease, there are concerns related to the use of systemic agents over prolonged periods. Long-term use of corticosteroids and antibiotics may lead to adverse effects, drug interactions, and antimicrobial resistance. The development of topical therapy delivered directly to the sinonasal cavity has created an alternative treatment strategy to help potentiate these concerns. Many therapeutic agents can now be delivered into the sinonasal cavity by a variety of delivery methods, such as irrigations, sprays, and aerosols. This paper will provide a succinct summary of current and emerging evidence-based strategies to treat CRS.

Epidemiology

CRS is estimated to result in over 18 million physician visits in the United States each year4 and is self-diagnosed in one in seven adults.5 It is also the fifth most common diagnosis for an antibiotic prescription.6 Despite its prevalence, there is a surprising paucity of accurate epidemiologic data for CRS, especially CRSsNP. Patient surveys in the United States have found a 15%–16% prevalence of CRS;7,8 however, a prevalence of only 2% was found using ICD-9 (International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision) codes as an identifier.9 In studies from Canada, Korea, Scotland, Europe, and Sao Paulo, prevalence of CRS ranges from 1%–11%.10–14 Population-based studies of CRSwNP from Sweden, Korea, Finland, and France report the prevalence of CRSwNP to lie between 0.5% and 4.3%.15–18 Autopsy studies reveal a higher prevalence between 2% and 42%, with more polyps found in dissected naso-ethmoidal blocks and endoscopic sinus surgery (ESS) than with anterior rhinoscopy alone.19,20 Men and women are both affected by CRSwNP, with some discordance in the literature as to which sex is more frequently affected. In general, nasal polyps occur in all races and become more common with age, with the average age of onset being 42 years.18

Etiology

Regarding the etiology of CRS, numerous hypotheses have been proposed with a great deal of overlap, supporting a multifactorial basis. One classification method separates potential contributing entities into host and environmental factors (Figure 2).2 Although comprehensive, this scheme fails to illustrate causal relationships and host–environment interactions. The heterogeneous nature of CRS is important to understand when planning treatment for this diverse group of patients whose disease may have arisen from very different underlying etiologies. In a broad generalization, CRSwNP in the Caucasian population is associated more closely with high tissue eosinophilia and increased T helper (Th)-2 cytokine expression (interleukin [IL]-5 and IL-13) as well as nasal obstruction and smell loss. Meanwhile, CRSsNP may have more Th-1 polarization and less eosinophilic infiltration (Figure 3).3 However, these characterizations may not hold true for other ethnic populations. Dysfunction in the eicosanoid pathway, with increased synthesis of pro-inflammatory leukotrienes and decreased synthesis of anti-inflammatory prostaglandins, has been proposed as a mechanism for both aspirin-sensitive and aspirin-tolerant CRSwNP.21 Defects in the coordinated mechanical barrier and/or the innate immune response of the sinonasal epithelium has also been proposed as a mechanism for CRS. This susceptibility may be based on host genetic factors, predisposing some individuals to mechanical barrier failure in the presence of environmental stress.22 CRS is a common problem in patients with Kartagener’s syndrome, primary ciliary dyskinesia, and cystic fibrosis. Inability of the sinonasal cilia to transport viscous mucus causes ciliary malfunction leading to CRS. Epithelial damage and/or host barrier dysfunction may result in colonization of the sinonasal mucosa with Staphylococcus aureus. Subsequent secretion of superantigenic toxins may lead to a skewed Th-2 host inflammatory response with generation of local polyclonal immunoglobulin E (IgE), promotion of eosinophil survival and mast cell degranulation with alteration of eicosanoid metabolism.23 The sum of these local tissue effects may lead to polyp formation. New evidence also implicates the generation of local autoantibodies in perpetuating tissue damage in the most severe forms of CRSwNP.24 The role of microbes as causative agents in CRS is not clear, but microbial infection and biofilms may contribute to the propagation of CRS. S. aureus is the most common bacterial pathogen identified in CRS patients in Western countries.25 Coagulase-negative Staphylococcus and anaerobic and Gram-negative bacteria are also commonly cultured from CRS patients.26 A recent prospective study of samples obtained from the middle meatus using the 16S ribosomal technique revealed a polymicrobial flora in CRS that was distinct from controls, with a preponderance of anaerobes in CRS.27 In post-surgical patients, Pseudomonas, Klebsiella, Enterobacter, and Staphylococcus species predominate.26 Bacterial biofilms, which are largely absent in controls, have been recovered from both CRSsNP and CRSwNP patients, with reported rates varying between 30% and 100%.28–30 While it is not known whether biofilms have a role in the establishment of CRS, it is widely accepted that biofilms facilitate resistance to host defenses and antibiotics, helping to foster recalcitrant disease. Although antibiotics are the most common form of therapy prescribed by physicians for the treatment of CRS,31 the precise role of bacteria in CRS pathogenesis remains unclear. The role of fungi in CRS has been the source of much debate in the last decade. The use of sensitive detection techniques has shown fungi are a ubiquitous intranasal presence in close to 100% of CRS patients and controls.32 Despite this observation, there is a lack of definitive evidence demonstrating that fungal antigens are the primary targets of the mucosal T or B cell responses observed in CRS (with the exception of allergic fungal rhinosinusitis).2,33

Diagnosis

CRS is diagnosed based on clinical symptoms and objective evaluation. Symptoms must be present for at least 12 consecutive weeks. Nasal obstruction, facial pressure/ congestion/fullness, discolored nasal discharge, and hyposmia are the signs and symptoms used to diagnose CRS (Figure 1).1 Several studies have shown using symptoms alone to diagnose CRS can be nonspecific.34–36 Therefore, nasal endoscopy or imaging must also be used to confirm the presence of sinonasal disease to increase the specificity of diagnosis.1 Endoscopic findings suggestive of CRS include mucopurulent discharge, nasal polyps or polypoid change, and/or mucosal edema obstructing the middle meatus. A recent study found the addition of endoscopic findings to symptom-based criteria significantly improved diagnostic accuracy of CRS.37 Computed tomography (CT) is considered the gold standard for imaging in CRS.38,39 Findings consistent with CRS include isolated or diffuse mucosal thickening, bone changes, or air-fluid levels.1 Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) does not pose a radiation risk and has improved soft tissue definition over CT scan, but is more expensive. Recent evidence shows a close correlation between CT and MRI in the staging accuracy of sinonasal disease.40 Patients with CRS may frequently present with associated diagnoses of asthma, allergy, dental disease, nasal polyposis, ciliary dyskinesia, cystic fibrosis, and immunodeficiency syndromes. Thus, CRS represents a spectrum of diseases with a range of appropriate treatments. Once the diagnosis of CRS has been established, workup and treatment of patients must be individualized.

Standard treatment

Although the American Academy of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery guidelines state CRS should be treated with “maximal medical therapy,”1 there is no such standardized therapy for CRS. This is in part due to the heterogeneity of the disease, which includes CRSwNP, CRSsNP, allergic fungal rhinosinusitis (AFS), and CRS associated with other systemic diseases such as atopy, asthma, cystic fibrosis, and aspirin-exacerbated respiratory disease (AERD). Symptoms may be mild with little effect on quality of life, or may result in significant health problems and loss of productivity. As such, maximal medical therapy is best considered as a philosophical approach, in which CRS in a given individual is treated with a combination of medical strategies best suited for that patient. These treatment strategies include topical and systemic medications. Surgery is performed for recalcitrant disease refractory to medical therapy. This article presents a brief summary of current evidence-based management of CRS. The authors recommend referring to the “European position paper on rhinosinusitis and nasal polyps” by Fokkens et al33 for a more comprehensive review.

Topical medical therapy

Topical medication delivery

The delivery of topical medications has been the subject of recent investigations. Distribution of topical solution to the unoperated sinuses is limited,41 with less than 2% of the total irrigation volume attaining sinus penetration in the setting of CRS with mucosal edema.42 Similar findings apply to nebulization, with less than 3% sinus penetration.43 Pre-surgery nasal sprays are the least effective of all application methods.41 Thus, ESS is essential to allow effective topical distribution to the sinuses.41,44 Singhal et al45 further demonstrated this in a cadaver study which showed improved penetration of irrigant as sinus ostium dimensions increase. A critical diameter of 4.7 mm was noted to allow maximal penetration in the maxillary and sphenoid sinuses. Head position was found to effect penetration of the frontal sinus, with less penetration seen with the head in neutral position versus a forward-angled position.45 Multiple studies suggest large volume devices have the best efficacy following ESS.41,42,44 In Harvey and colleagues’41 experiment using Gastroview irrigation in cadavers, distribution was significantly higher with use of a neti pot or squeeze bottle versus a pressurized spray.

Intranasal saline

Numerous studies have been performed to evaluate the efficacy of saline nasal irrigation in relieving CRS symptoms and improving clinical outcomes. Harvey et al46 published a meta-analysis in 2007, which identified eight randomized controlled trials in which saline was compared with either no treatment, placebo, or as a treatment adjunct. The authors concluded that saline nasal irrigation is beneficial in relieving symptoms of CRS when used as the sole modality of treatment, as well as a treatment adjunct.46 Rudmik et al47 recently published an evidence-based review of topical therapies in the management of CRS including eight randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and one meta-analysis evaluating saline. They recommended sinonasal saline irrigations as an adjunct to other topical therapy strategies due to improved symptoms and health-related quality of life, an excellent safety profile, and preponderance of benefit over harm.47 Intranasal saline has been shown to be beneficial in both unoperated and postoperative patients. High volume, low pressure irrigation devices have demonstrated superiority over other methods of delivery. Pynnonen et al48 evaluated the efficacy of large volume, low-pressure saline irrigation versus saline spray in non-postoperative patients in an RCT. The irrigation group had improved symptoms over the spray group as measured by the Sino-Nasal Outcome Test (SNOT-20).48 Liang et al49 performed a randomized trial of large-volume saline irrigation in CRS patients post-ESS and found significant benefit in symptoms and endoscopy scores in patients with mild CRS. However, there was no significant difference in those with severe CRS.49 Other studies evaluating the effect of intranasal saline on endoscopic appearance in CRS have been performed. A single-blinded RCT in which patients post-ESS performed unilateral nasal douching demonstrated improved discharge and edema at 3 weeks, but no difference in adhesions or crusting. There were no differences in nasal endoscopy noted at 3 months.50 One criticism of this study is the low-volume saline irrigation protocol (2 mL atomized 3 times daily) used. Table 1 lists ten RCTs evaluating the impact of intranasal saline on clinical outcomes in CRS patients, with type of saline (hypertonic versus isotonic), delivery method, and outcomes noted. Both pre-surgical and post-ESS studies were included. All seven pre-surgical RCTs48,51–55,57 demonstrated improved symptoms and health-related quality of life, although the study by Heatley et al53 showed no difference between reflexology as placebo and saline irrigation groups. Of the three post-ESS studies, two RCTs showed improved outcomes with intranasal saline,49,50 while the third showed no difference in patient symptom scores between normal saline, hypertonic saline, and no irrigation groups.56 Overall, saline nasal irrigations are well tolerated. Side effects are uncommon, but include nasal discomfort, drainage, epistaxis, headache, and otalgia.46 Most studies suggest symptom and health-related quality of life improvement with usage. The superiority of hypertonic versus isotonic saline remains unclear.
Table 1

Randomized controlled trials evaluating intranasal saline in CRS

AuthorYearOutcome measuresTreatment groupsDelivery methodResults
Shoseyov et al511998Symptom and radiological scores in children3.5% HTS versus ITS1 mL nasal dropsImproved cough score in HTS group; other scores similar
Bachmann et al522000Symptom, endoscopic, mucociliary clearance, rhinometry and olfactometry scoresHTS versus ITS200 mL irrigatorImproved symptom scores in both groups; no difference between groups
Heatley et al532001SNOT-20 and RSOM31 scores2.7% HTS via bulb syringe versus irrigation pot versus reflexology placeboBulb syringe versus irrigatorImproved scores in all groups, with no difference between groups and placebo
Rabago et al542002QoL, RSDI, and SIA scores2% HTS versus control300 mL nasal cupImproved RSDI and SIA in saline group versus controls
Cordray et al552005QoL scoresHTS versus triamcinolone versus ITSNasal sprayImprovements in steroid and HTS groups
Pinto et al562006Symptoms post-ESSITS versus HTS versus controlNasal sprayNo symptom improvement in ITS or HTS group over control. More pain in HTS group
Hauptmanand Ryan572007Acoustic rhinometry, saccharine clearance times, symptomsITS versus HTSNasal sprayITS and HTS improved saccharine clearance times and symptoms of nasal stuffiness. ITS improved nasal patency
Pynnonen et al482007SNOT-20 score, symptom frequency, and medication usageITS via large volume irrigation versus sprayLarge volume irrigation versus sprayImproved SNOT-20 score and symptom frequency in irrigation over spray group
Liang et al492008Symptom and endoscopy scores post-ESSBuffered ITS + medical treatment versus medical treatment500 mL pulsatile irrigatorImproved endoscopy and symptom scores in irrigation group with mild CRS only
Freeman et al502008Endoscopy scores post-ESSITS + medical treatment versus medical treatment2 mL atomizedImproved endoscopic appearance at 3 weeks; no difference at 3 months

Abbreviations: CRS, chronic rhinosinusitis; HTS, hypertonic saline; ITS, isotonic saline; SNOT-20, Sino-Nasal Outcome Test; RSOM31, rhinosinusitis outcomes measure; QoL, quality of life; RSDI, rhinosinusitis disability index; SIA, symptoms severity assessment; ESS, endoscopic sinus surgery.

Topical steroids

Glucocorticoids are a mainstay of CRS treatment. Steroids reduce eosinophil viability and activation58,59 and may indirectly reduce the secretion of chemotactic cytokines by nasal mucosa and polyp epithelial cells.59 Topical sinonasal steroids are used to achieve these anti-inflammatory effects on a local level, thereby minimizing systemic effects. They have an excellent safety profile and are well tolerated over long periods of time. Topical steroids can be subdivided into conventional US Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved formulations for nasal use, and nonconventional formulations lacking FDA approval specifically for nasal therapy. Conventional FDA-approved solutions available by metered-dose, low-volume topical sprays include fluticasone proprionate, mometasone furoate, ciclesonide, budesonide, flunisolide, fluticasone furoate, beclomethasone dipropionate monohydrate, and triamcinolone acetonide.47 Nonconventional off-label use of steroid nasal irrigation is growing in popularity with rhinologists, as higher volume and higher steroid concentrations can be used. Large volume nasal irrigation with budesonide, a potent anti-inflammatory corticosteroid with a high ratio of topical-to-systemic activity, has become increasingly popular in patients with CRS and has been shown to be efficacious and well tolerated by patients.60,61 Fokkens et al33 performed a recent systematic review of RCTs for evidence of benefit in treating CRSsNP with topical corticosteroids, which included eleven studies. Of these, data from five studies could be pooled for meta-analysis, demonstrating significant benefit in the topical steroid group when compared with placebo. When the surgical state of the patients was assessed on subgroup analysis, only patients with prior surgery for CRSsNP had symptom improvement. There was no improvement for patients without surgery.33 Topical steroids are also effective in CRSwNP. Fokkens et al33 performed a separate systematic review of RCTs for CRSwNP treated with topical corticosteroids, which yielded 38 studies. Meta-analysis showed intranasal steroids, when compared to placebo, improved symptoms, polyp size, polyp recurrence, and nasal airflow. In the subgroup analysis, patients with sinus surgery responded to topical steroids greater than patients without sinus surgery in polyp size reduction.33 Rudmik et al47 identified five meta-analyses evaluating the role of conventional FDA-approved topical nasal steroid therapy on clinical outcomes, combining CRSsNP and CRSwNP. Four of the five meta-analyses demonstrated significant improvement in symptoms, endoscopic appearance, or both.62–65 The meta-analysis by Kalish et al66 combined the results of six RCTs to evaluate the effect of topical steroid therapy in CRSsNP, and was the only study finding insufficient evidence to demonstrate a significant benefit with treatment. However, the more recent meta-analysis of topical steroid therapy in CRSsNP by Snidvongs et al65 included ten RCTs and showed improved overall symptom scores with topical steroid therapy. There is a large body of evidence demonstrating the efficacy of conventional topical steroid therapy in both patients with CRSsNP and CRSwNP, with improved symptoms, endoscopic appearance, and reduced polyp size. Side effects are uncommon, but include epistaxis, dry nose, nasal irritation, headache, and cough.33,47 Limited high-quality data exists regarding off-label steroid nasal irrigation. One RCT by Rotenberg et al,67 compared saline irrigation, saline plus budesonide spray (separately), and saline plus budesonide spray (combined) in patients with AERD post-ESS. All groups showed improved disease status compared with baseline, but there was no difference between groups.67 Further studies are indicated to determine potential benefits and side-effects of off-label topical steroid usage.

Topical antibiotics

The goal of topical antibiotic therapy is local delivery of high drug concentrations while reducing systemic effects. However, the efficacy of topical antibiotics has not been proven. Four placebo-controlled RCTs of topical antibiotics in CRS have been performed (Table 2).68–71 Three RCTs show no benefit to topical antibiotics over saline; however, none of these investigations employed large volume positive pressure irrigation. The first study by Sykes et al68 evaluated topical sprays with neomycin, while the others used nebulized tobramycin and bacitracin/colimycin, respectively.69,70 One possible reason for lack of efficacy in these studies is inadequate sinus penetration with the delivery methods used. A systematic review by Lim et al72 similarly concluded that the evidence for use of topical antibacterials is limited. The highest level of evidence currently exists for studies using postsurgical patients and culture-directed therapy.72
Table 2

Randomized controlled trials evaluating topical antibiotics in CRS

AuthorYearOutcome measuresTreatment groupsTreatment protocolResult
Sykes et al681986Symptoms, bacterial culture, sinus radiograph, saccharin clearance, allergy testingDexamethasone/tramazoline/neomycin versus dexamethasone/ tramazoline versus placeboNasal spray QID × 4 weeksImprovements in both treatment groups over placebo; no difference with addition of topical antibiotic
Desrosiers et al692001Symptoms, QoL, endoscopyTobramcyin in saline versus salineLarge-particle nebulizer TID × 4 weeksImprovements in both groups; no benefit of tobramycin over saline
Videler et al702008Symptoms, QoL, endoscopyBacitracin/colimycin versus placeboRhinoFlow nebulizer BID + oral levofloxacinImprovements in both groups, with no benefit over placebo
Jervis-Bardy et al712012Bacterial culture, symptoms, endoscopy post-ESSMupirocin versus saline in Staphylococcus aureus-positive patients240 mL irrigation BID × 1 monthStaphylococcus aureus culture negativity in 88.9% of mupirocin versus 0% of saline group; improved early endoscopic score in mupirocin group over saline; no difference in symptoms between groups

Abbreviations: CRS, chronic rhinosinusitis; QID, four times daily; QoL, quality of life; TID, three times daily; BID, twice daily; ESS, endoscopic sinus surgery.

Jervis-Bardy et al71 recently published a double-blinded, placebo-controlled RCT evaluating topical mupirocin irrigations versus saline on bacterial cultures, symptoms, and endoscopy scores in post-ESS patients with a pre-treatment S. aureus positive culture. They found 0% versus 88.9% S. aureus-negative sinonasal culture at 1 month in the saline versus mupirocin groups, respectively. Endoscopy scores at 1 month were significantly improved in the mupirocin group compared with the saline group; however, there were no significant differences in symptoms between groups.71 Recent investigations of topical antibiotics in CRS have been directed toward biofilms. The topical application of mupirocin, ciprofloxacin, and vancomycin on established in-vitro biofilms of S. aureus isolated from patients with CRS was evaluated by Ha et al.73 Their study showed mupirocin was capable of reducing biofilm mass by greater than 90% at safe concentrations. Ciprofloxacin and vancomycin were largely ineffective at concentrations within safe dosage ranges.73 Thus, topical antibiotics have potential efficacy; however, there is currently a low level of evidence for their use.

Emerging strategies in topical therapy

The treatment of biofilms is a subject under current investigation. In addition to topical antibiotics, newer research has been directed toward surfactants, which reduce water surface tension and may help to dissolve biofilms.74 Baby shampoo nasal irrigation has been studied against biofilms in symptomatic postoperative patients. One percent baby shampoo in normal saline was found to be the optimal concentration for inhibition of Pseudomonas species biofilm formation in vitro. Using this solution twice daily for 4 weeks, nearly 50% of patients experienced an overall improvement in symptoms, with 60% noting improvement of thick mucus and postnasal drainage.75 Other novel nasal irrigation additives include xylitol and sodium hypochlorite. Xylitol is a naturally occurring sugar substitute commonly used in chewing gum, which has been shown to reduce dental caries.76 A recent RCT evaluating xylitol in water as a nasal irrigant in CRS showed improved sinonasal symptoms over saline and was well tolerated.77 Sodium hypochlorite is a bleaching and disinfecting agent effective against S. aureus and Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Nasal lavage with 0.05% sodium hypochlorite in saline twice daily for 3 months was well tolerated in patients and showed a significant improvement in symptoms and endoscopic appearance.78

Systemic medical therapy

Oral steroids

Oral corticosteroids have been used in patients with CRSwNP for many years due to a positive effect on nasal polyp size, symptoms, and nasal expiratory peak flow. A recent systematic review by Poetker et al79 identified five RCTs supporting the use of oral steroids in the short-term management of CRSwNP (Table 3).
Table 3

Randomized controlled trials evaluating oral steroids in CRSwNP

AuthorYearNOutcome measuresTreatment groupsResults
Hissaria et al80200641Symptoms, MRI, endoscopyPrednisolone 50 mg daily versus placebo × 14 daysImproved symptoms, MRI and endoscopic appearance in steroid group versus control
Kroflic et al81200640Symptoms, endoscopy, histology, intraoperative bleedingMethylprednisolone 1 mg/kg daily versus nasal furosemide × 7 days pre-ESSImproved symptoms and polyp size in both groups with no clinical difference between groups
van Zele et al82201047Endoscopy, rhinometry, symptoms, SEC, nasal IL-5, IgE, MMP-9, ECPMethylprednisolone taper over 20 days versus oral doxycycline × 20 days versus placeboImproved polyp size, nasal patency, inflammatory markers and symptoms in steroid group versus placebo
Kirtsreesakul et al832011109Symptoms,rhinometry,endoscopyPrednisolone 50 mg daily versus placebo × 14 daysImproved symptoms, nasal patency and polyp size in steroid group versus control
vaidyanathan et al84201160Endoscopy, symptoms, QoL, rhinometry, CRP, EDNPrednisolone 25 mg daily versus placebo × 14 days, both followed by intranasal fluticasoneImproved polyp size, symptoms, QoL, serum EDN, and CRP in steroid group versus control

Abbreviations: CRSwNP, chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyposis; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; ESS, endoscopic sinus surgery; SEC, serum eosinophil count; IL-5, interleukin 5; IgE, immunoglobulin E; MMP-9, matrix metalloproteinase-9; ECP, eosinophilic cationic protein; QoL, quality of life; CRP, C-reactive protein; EDN, eosinophil-derived neurotoxin.

Hissaria et al80 randomized 41 CRSwNP patients to receive 50 mg of prednisolone or placebo for 14 days. The steroid group showed a statistically significant improvement over placebo in symptoms and quality of life outcome measures, in addition to nasal endoscopy and MRI. Kirtsreesakul et al83 also found statistically significant subjective and objective improvement in prednisolone-treated patients over controls. Vaidyanathan et al84 again showed statistically significant subjective and objective improvement in prednisolone-treated patients over controls. Interestingly, their outcomes also included markers of adrenal suppression and bone turnover. They found overnight urinary cortisol was suppressed to 50% of baseline and adrenocorticotropic hormone-stimulated serum cortisol suppressed to 86% of baseline at the end of the treatment period (2 weeks) in the steroid arm. They also showed a transient decrease in markers of osteoblast activity at 2 weeks. Both of these effects were no longer evident at 10 and 28 weeks.84 Finally, the RCT by Wright and Agrawal85 demonstrated the beneficial effects of perioperative systemic steroids in patients undergoing ESS for CRSwNP. They found a higher percentage of severely inflamed sinonasal mucosa and more technically difficult surgery in patients not pretreated with systemic steroids. In addition, endoscopic assessment of patients treated postop-eratively with systemic steroids revealed clinically healthier cavities compared with controls.85 There is limited evidence supporting oral steroid therapy in CRSsNP. A systematic review by Lal and Hwang86 revealed no RCTs of oral steroids in CRSsNP or any clinical study employing systemic corticosteroids alone. They identified two retrospective87,88 and one prospective study89 using oral steroids in combination with antibiotics and nasal steroids to treat CRSsNP. Tosca et al89 prospectively studied children with allergic and nonallergic CRS and asthma, showing oral and intranasal steroids with oral antibiotics improved endoscopy and decreased inflammatory infiltrate. The retrospective study by Subramanian et al87 included both CRSwNP and CRSsNP, but found the CRSsNP patients had better outcomes with a multidrug regimen including oral steroids. Lal et al88 noted improved symptom resolution in CRSsNP compared with all CRS patients in a retrospective study. Due to limited low level evidence of subjective and objective improvement, oral steroids in CRSsNP remains optional.79,86 Rupa et al90 published the only RCT evaluating post-ESS oral steroids in patients with AFS. Twenty-four patients were randomized to receive prednisolone or placebo, while patients in both arms received concurrent ranitidine, itraconazole, and fluticasone nasal spray. At 12 weeks, patients in the steroid arm had complete resolution of symptoms and polypoid disease on endoscopy, whereas only one patient in the placebo arm had full symptom and endoscopic resolution of disease.90 Two prospective studies found oral steroids similarly beneficial in AFS.91,92 Systemic corticosteroids have a significant side effect profile, which increases with dose and duration of treatment. Patients should be counseled regarding the possible negative effects on bone mineral density, hyperglycemia, weight gain, early cataract formation, pituitary–hypothalamic axis suppression, sleep disturbance, and exacerbation of psychiatric conditions.93 Given the natural history of CRS requiring ongoing treatment over long periods of time, the short-lived benefits of systemic steroids must be balanced with the long-term potential side effects. The preponderance of benefit over harm is better supported by trials in CRSwNP than in CRSsNP, where evidence is insufficient.

Oral antibiotics

Oral antibiotics are the most commonly prescribed medication for CRS31 and remain a mainstay of treatment. Despite this, there is a surprising paucity of quality data regarding efficacy. There is level 2 evidence for short-term treatment of CRSsNP in exacerbations with a positive culture based on two RCTs,94,95 though no placebo-controlled studies have been performed. In general, first-line antibiotics for CRS exacerbations include amoxicillin-clavulanate and second- or third-generation cephalosporins. The respiratory quinolones are helpful second-line agents for refractory cases (Figure 4).96
Figure 4

Efficacy of antibiotics in CRS.

Note: Data from Anon JB, et al. Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 2004;130(1 Suppl):1–45.

Abbreviations: HD, high dose; TMP/SMX, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole.

The increasing prevalence of S. aureus and antimicrobial resistance in CRS highlights the importance of using culture-directed antimicrobial therapy with the goal of minimizing future resistance patterns.97 Bhattacharyya and Kepnes98 analyzed 701 bacterial isolates among 392 culture samples from patients with CRS, and concluded that antibiotic resistance seems to be emerging for erythromycin at a rate higher than for other antibiotics such as methicillin, clindamycin, gentamicin, tetracycline, sulfamethoxazole, and levofloxacin. As the emergence of antibiotic resistance has increased the failure rate of empiric treatment, culture-directed therapy has become the standard of care when treating CRS with antibiotics.99 Based on the emerging pattern of drug-resistance, it is not surprising that macrolides have often been the antibiotic of choice in long-term therapy of CRS. Macrolides have anti-inflammatory and immune-modulatory effects similar to glucocorticoids. Knowledge of this dates back to the publication of long-term, low-dose erythromycin treatment of diffuse panbronchiolitis, which improved concomitant CRS.100 Two placebo-controlled RCTs have studied the effect of a macrolide on signs, symptoms, and quality of life in CRS over a period of 12 weeks.101,102 While the first investigation showed clinical efficacy of roxithromycin with a response rate of 67% in the treatment group versus 22% in the placebo group,101 the second study showed no significant difference between azithromycin and placebo groups.102 The discrepancy in these results may be secondary to divergent CRS patient populations, as the studies had different inclusion criteria, and macrolides have been found to be more effective in certain patient populations. For example, normal IgE levels are associated with a higher response rate to macrolide treatment versus elevated IgE levels,101,103,104 which highlights the need to individualize CRS therapy. Doxycycline is another antibiotic with anti- inflammatory properties. In a multicenter double-blind placebo- controlled trial, both methylprednisolone and doxycycline for 20 days decreased polyp size compared with placebo in CRSwNP.82 Long-term, low-dose antibacterial treatment presents the greatest concern for the emergence of resistant bacterial strains. In a placebo-controlled RCT exposing oral strepto-coccal flora of healthy volunteers to macrolides, antibiotic use was shown to be the most important driver of antibiotic resistance.105 Consideration should also be given to the well known adverse effects of systemic antibiotics, including abdominal pain, diarrhea, Clostridium difficile colitis, anaphylaxis, rash, tendinitis, and tendon rupture. Some of these effects are exacerbated with concomitant oral steroid usage. Patient counseling regarding these potential effects is recommended prior to prescribing oral antibiotics.

Antifungals

Fungi have been postulated to be a potential cause of CRS,32 therefore oral and topical antifungal agents have been explored in its management. Although an early RCT found topical amphotericin to be beneficial,106 multiple follow-up RCTs evaluating the efficacy of topical amphotericin in CRS have not supported its use.107–109 A recent systematic review of the literature with meta-analysis was performed by Sacks et al110 to assess the potential advantage of either topical or systemic antifungal therapy in the symptomatic treatment of CRS. This yielded five studies investigating topical and one study investigating systemic antifungals, all of which were RCTs. Pooled meta-analysis showed no statistically significant benefit of topical or systemic antifungals over placebo. Interestingly, symptoms scores statistically favored placebo and adverse event reporting was higher in the antifungal group.110

Emerging strategies in systemic therapy

Leukotriene antagonists

Leukotriene antagonists, such as montelukast, zafirlukast, and zileuton, have been evaluated in numerous studies involving patients with CRSwNP and AERD. Results have been mixed. Several uncontrolled open-label studies suggest benefit of antileukotrienes on symptomatology,111 nasal polyp, and CT scores.112 However, data from RCTs do not consistently support the benefit of antileukotriene therapy in all CRS patients. Mostafa et al113 randomized 40 CRSwNP patients to either 10 mg monteleukast or beclomethasone nasal spray daily for 1 year, finding no differences in disease relapse frequency and greater overall symptom improvement with beclomethasone. Another RCT separated 38 CRSwNP patients into two groups. The first received oral prednisolone for 14 days plus budesonide nasal spray for 8 weeks. The second received the same treatment with the addition of 10 mg oral monteleukast. The addition of monteleukast failed to show a significant effect on the overall symptom score, although reduction in headache, facial pain, and sneezing reached significance.114

Anti-IgE therapy

In CRSwNP, total IgE levels in nasal secretions, nasal polyp homogenisates and blood serum have been shown to be higher than in controls.115 Omalizumab is a recombinant humanized monoclonal antibody that selectively binds to human IgE and reduces levels in serum and tissue, which is approved for patients with moderate to severe or severe allergic asthma. Though anecdotal reports showed beneficial effects of omalizumab in CRSwNP, a small RCT showed no significant difference in sinus opacification or SNOT-20 scores.116 This RCT, however, was underpowered. Further investigation regarding anti-IgE therapy may be warranted.

Anti-IL-5 therapy

Abundant eosinophilia is also found in the majority of patients with CRSwNP. IL-5, produced by Th-2 and mast cells, is a key player in eosinophil growth, recruitment, and activation. IL-5 has been found to be significantly increased in patients with nasal polyps compared with controls. Mepolizumab and reslizumab are humanized anti-IL-5 monoclonal antibodies currently undergoing investigation in the treatment of CRSwNP. A double-blind, placebo-controlled RCT including 30 patients with severe nasal polyposis refractory to corticosteroid therapy found two single intravenous injections of mepolizumab achieved a statistically significant reduction in nasal polyp size for at least 1 month when compared with placebo. In addition, significantly less sinus opacification was observed in the treatment arm.117 Another double-blind, placebo-controlled RCT showed a single infusion of reslizumab in CRSwNP patients had no significant improvement on symptoms or nasal polyp score over controls.118 Anti-IL-5 therapy is an interesting area for future research.

Aspirin desensitization

Aspirin desensitization for patients with AERD has been evaluated in several case series and prospective studies; however, no RCTs have been performed. Forer et al119 found significantly improved symptoms in patients undergoing aspirin desensitization, though objective results were not significant. Stevenson et al120 also noted significantly improved nasal symptoms in 25 AERD patients following aspirin desensitization. Rozsasi et al121 allocated AERD patients to either take 100 mg or 300 mg aspirin daily. After 1 year of therapy, all patients in the 100 mg group had developed recurrent nasal polyps, whereas no patient in the 300 mg group had recurrent nasal polyps on endoscopy.121 Risks of oral aspirin desensitization include severe hypersensitivity, anaphylaxis, and gastrointestinal side effects.

Endoscopic sinus surgery

Numerous large, well organized prospective studies have shown endoscopic sinus surgery (ESS) to be safe and effective in managing both patients with CRSsNP and CRSwNP who have failed adequate control with medical treatment.122,123 The goals of ESS include eradication of inflammatory tissue and osteitis, implementation of adequate drainage and ventilation pathways, restoration of mucociliary function, creation of access for topical medication, reduction of acute exacerbations and systemic medication usage, and quality of life improvement. A review of 21 studies including 2070 patients with CRS found all symptoms were improved after a mean period of 13 months following ESS, with nasal obstruction improving the most, facial pain and postnasal discharge demonstrating moderate improvements, and headache improving the least.124 Improvements in generic and disease-specific quality of life with surgery have also been shown.122 ESS significantly decreases antibiotic utilization in CRSwNP and CRSsNP.125 In a prospective multi-institutional study comparing medical and surgical therapy for CRS, patients electing ESS experienced significantly higher levels of improvement based on two validated disease-specific quality-of-life instruments.126 Approximately 15%–20% of patients require revision sinus surgery. Previous revision surgery, extensive polyps, bronchial asthma, aspirin intolerance, and cystic fibrosis are predictors of patients who may require revision surgery.123

Conclusion

CRS is a complex condition with profound effects on patient quality of life and health care expenditure. Its management continues to challenge both patients and health care providers. There is now a preponderance of evidence supporting the concept that inflammation, as opposed to infection, is the dominant etiologic factor in CRS. While systemic antibiotics and steroids were a mainstay of treatment in the past, the focus is now shifting toward topical therapy, improved nasal delivery systems, and novel antiinflammatory therapies. Potential development of microbial resistance remains a salutary concern in patients treated with repeated or prolonged antimicrobial agents. Immune modulators, such as anti-IgE and anti-IL5 antibodies, are promising areas of ongoing research. Surgery continues to play an important role in management of recalcitrant disease, resulting in quality-of-life improvement and assisting in aggressive medical management. The complex and diverse nature of CRS requires an individualized approach to both medical and surgical management in a multidisciplinary setting.
  124 in total

1.  Pathogen yield and antimicrobial resistance patterns of chronic rhinosinusitis patients presenting to a tertiary rhinology centre.

Authors:  Krista A Genoway; Carl M Philpott; Amin R Javer
Journal:  J Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg       Date:  2011-06

2.  Mepolizumab, a humanized anti-IL-5 mAb, as a treatment option for severe nasal polyposis.

Authors:  Philippe Gevaert; Nicholas Van Bruaene; Tom Cattaert; Kristel Van Steen; Thibaut Van Zele; Frederic Acke; Natalie De Ruyck; Katrien Blomme; Ana R Sousa; Richard P Marshall; Claus Bachert
Journal:  J Allergy Clin Immunol       Date:  2011-09-28       Impact factor: 10.793

3.  Lack of efficacy of long-term, low-dose azithromycin in chronic rhinosinusitis: a randomized controlled trial.

Authors:  W J Videler; L Badia; R J Harvey; S Gane; C Georgalas; F W van der Meulen; D J Menger; M T Lehtonen; S K Toppila-Salmi; S I Vento; M Hytönen; P W Hellings; L Kalogjera; V J Lund; G Scadding; J Mullol; W J Fokkens
Journal:  Allergy       Date:  2011-09-02       Impact factor: 13.146

4.  Regional and specialty variations in the treatment of chronic rhinosinusitis.

Authors:  Linda N Lee; Neil Bhattacharyya
Journal:  Laryngoscope       Date:  2011-05       Impact factor: 3.325

Review 5.  Topical steroid for chronic rhinosinusitis without polyps.

Authors:  Kornkiat Snidvongs; Larry Kalish; Raymond Sacks; Jonathan C Craig; Richard J Harvey
Journal:  Cochrane Database Syst Rev       Date:  2011-08-10

6.  Chronic rhinosinusitis in Europe--an underestimated disease. A GA²LEN study.

Authors:  D Hastan; W J Fokkens; C Bachert; R B Newson; J Bislimovska; A Bockelbrink; P J Bousquet; G Brozek; A Bruno; S E Dahlén; B Forsberg; M Gunnbjörnsdóttir; L Kasper; U Krämer; M L Kowalski; B Lange; B Lundbäck; E Salagean; A Todo-Bom; P Tomassen; E Toskala; C M van Drunen; J Bousquet; T Zuberbier; D Jarvis; P Burney
Journal:  Allergy       Date:  2011-05-24       Impact factor: 13.146

Review 7.  Microbiology of sinusitis: does allergy or endoscopic sinus surgery affect the microbiologic flora?

Authors:  Daniel A Larson; Joseph K Han
Journal:  Curr Opin Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg       Date:  2011-06       Impact factor: 2.064

8.  Postoperative care for Samter's triad patients undergoing endoscopic sinus surgery: a double-blinded, randomized controlled trial.

Authors:  Brian W Rotenberg; Irene Zhang; Ian Arra; Keith B Payton
Journal:  Laryngoscope       Date:  2011-10-13       Impact factor: 3.325

9.  Xylitol nasal irrigation in the management of chronic rhinosinusitis: a pilot study.

Authors:  Joshua D Weissman; Francisca Fernandez; Peter H Hwang
Journal:  Laryngoscope       Date:  2011-10-12       Impact factor: 3.325

10.  Reduced expression of COXs and production of prostaglandin E(2) in patients with nasal polyps with or without aspirin-intolerant asthma.

Authors:  Jordi Roca-Ferrer; Francesc J Garcia-Garcia; Javier Pereda; Maria Perez-Gonzalez; Laura Pujols; Isam Alobid; Joaquim Mullol; Cesar Picado
Journal:  J Allergy Clin Immunol       Date:  2011-03-12       Impact factor: 10.793

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  17 in total

1.  A new Strategy to Improve Drug Delivery to the Maxillary Sinuses: The Frequency Sweep Acoustic Airflow.

Authors:  Amira El Merhie; Laurent Navarro; Xavier Delavenne; Lara Leclerc; Jérémie Pourchez
Journal:  Pharm Res       Date:  2015-12-30       Impact factor: 4.200

2.  Antibiofilm effects of amoxicillin-clavulanic acid and levofloxacin in patients with chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyposis.

Authors:  Dragana D Božić; Bojan Pavlović; Jovica Milovanović; Ana Jotić; Jelena Čolović; Ivana Ćirković
Journal:  Eur Arch Otorhinolaryngol       Date:  2018-06-29       Impact factor: 2.503

Review 3.  Is sinus disease the cause of my headaches? An update on sinus disease and headache.

Authors:  Larry Charleston; Richard Strabbing; Wade Cooper
Journal:  Curr Pain Headache Rep       Date:  2014-06

4.  Oral Isotretinoin May Improve the Symptoms of Chronic Rhinosinusitis.

Authors:  Habibullah Aktaş; Can Ergin; Aziz Tunç; Süha Ertuğrul
Journal:  J Clin Diagn Res       Date:  2017-05-01

Review 5.  Contribution of Epithelial Cell Dysfunction to the Pathogenesis of Chronic Rhinosinusitis with Nasal Polyps.

Authors:  Michael Wynne; Carl Atkinson; Rodney J Schlosser; Jennifer K Mulligan
Journal:  Am J Rhinol Allergy       Date:  2019-08-05       Impact factor: 2.467

Review 6.  Chronic Rhinosinusitis and the Evolving Understanding of Microbial Ecology in Chronic Inflammatory Mucosal Disease.

Authors:  Michael Hoggard; Brett Wagner Mackenzie; Ravi Jain; Michael W Taylor; Kristi Biswas; Richard G Douglas
Journal:  Clin Microbiol Rev       Date:  2017-01       Impact factor: 26.132

7.  Intranasal Delivery of Topically-Acting Levofloxacin to Rats: a Proof-of-Concept Pharmacokinetic Study.

Authors:  Joana Sousa; Gilberto Alves; Ana Fortuna; Amílcar Falcão
Journal:  Pharm Res       Date:  2017-07-26       Impact factor: 4.200

8.  Antibiofilm effects of topical corticosteroids and intranasal saline in patients with chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps depend on bacterial species and their biofilm-forming capacity.

Authors:  Ivana Cirkovic; Bojan Pavlovic; Dragana D Bozic; Ana Jotic; Ljubica Bakic; Jovica Milovanovic
Journal:  Eur Arch Otorhinolaryngol       Date:  2017-01-23       Impact factor: 2.503

9.  Invasive pseudomembranous upper airway and tracheal Aspergillosis refractory to systemic antifungal therapy and serial surgical debridement in an Immunocompetent patient.

Authors:  Shihan N Khan; Rashmi Manur; John S Brooks; Michael A Husson; Kevin Leahy; Matthew Grant
Journal:  BMC Infect Dis       Date:  2020-01-06       Impact factor: 3.090

10.  Prevention of sinonasal inflammation by a synthetic glycosaminoglycan.

Authors:  Abigail Pulsipher; Xuan Qin; Andrew J Thomas; Glenn D Prestwich; Siam Oottamasathien; Jeremiah A Alt
Journal:  Int Forum Allergy Rhinol       Date:  2016-11-11       Impact factor: 3.858

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