| Literature DB >> 23378777 |
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
Figure 1Diagnosis 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 2Factors 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 3CRS 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.
Randomized controlled trials evaluating intranasal saline in CRS
| Author | Year | Outcome measures | Treatment groups | Delivery method | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Shoseyov et al | 1998 | Symptom and radiological scores in children | 3.5% HTS versus ITS | 1 mL nasal drops | Improved cough score in HTS group; other scores similar |
| Bachmann et al | 2000 | Symptom, endoscopic, mucociliary clearance, rhinometry and olfactometry scores | HTS versus ITS | 200 mL irrigator | Improved symptom scores in both groups; no difference between groups |
| Heatley et al | 2001 | SNOT-20 and RSOM31 scores | 2.7% HTS via bulb syringe versus irrigation pot versus reflexology placebo | Bulb syringe versus irrigator | Improved scores in all groups, with no difference between groups and placebo |
| Rabago et al | 2002 | QoL, RSDI, and SIA scores | 2% HTS versus control | 300 mL nasal cup | Improved RSDI and SIA in saline group versus controls |
| Cordray et al | 2005 | QoL scores | HTS versus triamcinolone versus ITS | Nasal spray | Improvements in steroid and HTS groups |
| Pinto et al | 2006 | Symptoms post-ESS | ITS versus HTS versus control | Nasal spray | No symptom improvement in ITS or HTS group over control. More pain in HTS group |
| Hauptmanand Ryan | 2007 | Acoustic rhinometry, saccharine clearance times, symptoms | ITS versus HTS | Nasal spray | ITS and HTS improved saccharine clearance times and symptoms of nasal stuffiness. ITS improved nasal patency |
| Pynnonen et al | 2007 | SNOT-20 score, symptom frequency, and medication usage | ITS via large volume irrigation versus spray | Large volume irrigation versus spray | Improved SNOT-20 score and symptom frequency in irrigation over spray group |
| Liang et al | 2008 | Symptom and endoscopy scores post-ESS | Buffered ITS + medical treatment versus medical treatment | 500 mL pulsatile irrigator | Improved endoscopy and symptom scores in irrigation group with mild CRS only |
| Freeman et al | 2008 | Endoscopy scores post-ESS | ITS + medical treatment versus medical treatment | 2 mL atomized | Improved 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.
Randomized controlled trials evaluating topical antibiotics in CRS
| Author | Year | Outcome measures | Treatment groups | Treatment protocol | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sykes et al | 1986 | Symptoms, bacterial culture, sinus radiograph, saccharin clearance, allergy testing | Dexamethasone/tramazoline/neomycin versus dexamethasone/ tramazoline versus placebo | Nasal spray QID × 4 weeks | Improvements in both treatment groups over placebo; no difference with addition of topical antibiotic |
| Desrosiers et al | 2001 | Symptoms, QoL, endoscopy | Tobramcyin in saline versus saline | Large-particle nebulizer TID × 4 weeks | Improvements in both groups; no benefit of tobramycin over saline |
| Videler et al | 2008 | Symptoms, QoL, endoscopy | Bacitracin/colimycin versus placebo | RhinoFlow nebulizer BID + oral levofloxacin | Improvements in both groups, with no benefit over placebo |
| Jervis-Bardy et al | 2012 | Bacterial culture, symptoms, endoscopy post-ESS | Mupirocin versus saline in | 240 mL irrigation BID × 1 month |
Abbreviations: CRS, chronic rhinosinusitis; QID, four times daily; QoL, quality of life; TID, three times daily; BID, twice daily; ESS, endoscopic sinus surgery.
Randomized controlled trials evaluating oral steroids in CRSwNP
| Author | Year | N | Outcome measures | Treatment groups | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hissaria et al | 2006 | 41 | Symptoms, MRI, endoscopy | Prednisolone 50 mg daily versus placebo × 14 days | Improved symptoms, MRI and endoscopic appearance in steroid group versus control |
| Kroflic et al | 2006 | 40 | Symptoms, endoscopy, histology, intraoperative bleeding | Methylprednisolone 1 mg/kg daily versus nasal furosemide × 7 days pre-ESS | Improved symptoms and polyp size in both groups with no clinical difference between groups |
| van Zele et al | 2010 | 47 | Endoscopy, rhinometry, symptoms, SEC, nasal IL-5, IgE, MMP-9, ECP | Methylprednisolone taper over 20 days versus oral doxycycline × 20 days versus placebo | Improved polyp size, nasal patency, inflammatory markers and symptoms in steroid group versus placebo |
| Kirtsreesakul et al | 2011 | 109 | Symptoms,rhinometry,endoscopy | Prednisolone 50 mg daily versus placebo × 14 days | Improved symptoms, nasal patency and polyp size in steroid group versus control |
| vaidyanathan et al | 2011 | 60 | Endoscopy, symptoms, QoL, rhinometry, CRP, EDN | Prednisolone 25 mg daily versus placebo × 14 days, both followed by intranasal fluticasone | Improved 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.
Figure 4Efficacy 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.