| Literature DB >> 35158420 |
Do-Yang Park1, Ji Ho Choi2, Dong-Kyu Kim3, Yong Gi Jung4, Sue Jean Mun5, Hyun Jin Min6, Soo Kyoung Park7, Jae-Min Shin8, Hyung Chae Yang9, Seung-No Hong10, Ji-Hun Mo11.
Abstract
The Korean Society of Otorhinolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery and Korean Rhinologic Society appointed a guideline development group (GDG) to establish a clinical practice guideline, and the GDG developed a guideline for nasal irrigation for adult patients with chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS). The guideline focuses on knowledge gaps, practice variations, and clinical concerns associated with nasal irrigation. Nasal irrigation has been recommended as the first-line treatment for CRS in various guidelines, and its clinical effectiveness has been demonstrated through a number of studies with robust evidence. However, no guidelines have presented a consistent nasal irrigation method. Several databases, including OVID Medline, Embase, the Cochrane Library, and KoreaMed, were searched to identify all relevant papers using a predefined search strategy. When insufficient evidence was found, the GDG sought expert opinions and attempted to fill the evidence gap. Evidence-based recommendations for practice were ranked according to the American College of Physicians grading system. The committee developed 11 evidence-based recommendations. This guideline focuses on the evidence-based quality improvement opportunities deemed the most important by the GDG. Moreover, the guideline addresses whether nasal lavage helps treat CRS, what type of rinsing solution should be used, and the effectiveness of using additional medications to increase the therapeutic effect.Entities:
Keywords: Equipment; Guideline; Irrigation; Saline Solution; Sinusitis; Steroids; Treatment
Year: 2022 PMID: 35158420 PMCID: PMC8901942 DOI: 10.21053/ceo.2021.00654
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Exp Otorhinolaryngol ISSN: 1976-8710 Impact factor: 3.372
Fig. 1.Mechanism and sequence of irrigation of the nasal cavity and nose. (A) The diagram showing the location and relationship of each sinus and nasal cavity. (B-H) The irrigation fluid first hits the nasopharynx and then indirectly enters the sinus. According to cadaveric and threedimensional modeling studies, the fluid first passes through the ethmoid and nasopharynx, then the ipsilateral maxillary and sphenoid sinuses, followed by the frontal sinus and then the opposite side of the maxillary sinus.
Level of evidence
| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
| High-quality evidence | RCTs without important limitations or overwhelming evidence from observational studies |
| Medium-quality evidence | RCTs with important limitations or strong evidence from observational studies |
| Low-quality evidence | Observational studies/case studies/expert opinion |
RCT, randomized controlled trial.
Aggregate grades of evidence by question type
| Grade | OCEBM Level | Treatment | Harm |
|---|---|---|---|
| A | 1 | Systematic review of randomized trials | Systematic review of randomized trials, nested case-control studies, or observational studies with dramatic effect |
| B | 2 | Randomized trials or observational studies with dramatic effects or highly consistent evidence | Randomized trials or observational studies with dramatic effects or highly consistent evidence |
| C | 3–4 | Nonrandomized or historically controlled studies, including case-control and observational studies | Nonrandomized controlled cohort or follow-up study (post-marketing surveillance) with sufficient numbers to rule out a common harm, case-series, case-control, or historically controlled studies |
| D | 5 | Case reports, mechanism-based reasoning, or reasoning from first principles | |
| X | NA | Exceptional situations where validating studies cannot be performed and there is a clear preponderance of benefit over harm | |
OCEBM, Oxford Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine; NA, not applicable.
Guideline definitions for evidence-based statements
| Statement | Definition | Implied obligation |
|---|---|---|
| Strong recommendation | A strong recommendation means that the benefits of the recommended approach clearly exceed the harms (or that the harms clearly exceed the benefits in the case of a strong negative recommendation) and that the quality of the supporting evidence is excellent (grade A or B). In some clearly identified circumstances, strong recommendations may be made on the basis of lesser evidence when high-quality evidence is impossible to obtain and the anticipated benefits strongly outweigh the harms. | Clinicians should follow a strong recommendation unless a clear and compelling rationale for an alternative approach is present. |
| Recommendation | A recommendation means that the benefits exceed the harms (or that the harms exceed the benefits in the case of a negative recommendation), but the quality of evidence is not as strong (grade B or C). In some clearly identified circumstances, recommendations may be made on the basis of lesser evidence when high-quality evidence is impossible to obtain and the anticipated benefits outweigh the harms. | Clinicians should also generally follow a recommendation but should remain alert to new information and sensitive to patient preferences. |
| Option | An option means that either the quality of evidence that exists is suspect (grade D) or those well-done studies (grade A, B, or C) show little clear advantage to one approach versus another. | Clinicians should be flexible in their decision- making regarding appropriate practice, although they may set bounds on alternatives. Patient preference should have a substantial influencing role. |
Summary of evidence-based statements
| Statement | Action | Strength |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Nasal saline irrigation | Clinicians should recommend nasal saline irrigation to patients with chronic sinusitis or those who have undergone endoscopic sinus surgery. | Strong recommendation |
| 2. Saline tonicity | Clinicians may recommend using isotonic saline as a nasal irrigation solution for patients considering cost, convenience, and safety. However, it is unclear whether there is a clear difference in the therapeutic effect of hypertonic and isotonic saline solutions. | Option |
| 3. Saline temperature | Clinicians may recommend using room-temperature saline (around 20°C) as a nasal irrigation solution for patients considering effectiveness and convenience. If the patient prefers, then it is also completely acceptable to use a saline solution heated to 40°C. However, it is not recommended to immediately use a solution that has been refrigerated or to use a hot solution that exceeds 40°C for safety reasons. | Option |
| 4. Steroid solution | Clinicians may recommend nasal irrigation with solutions containing steroids to patients with chronic rhinosinusitis who have undergone endoscopic sinus surgery. | Option |
| 5. Antibiotic solution | Clinicians should not routinely recommend nasal irrigation with solutions containing antibiotics for the management of patients with chronic rhinosinusitis or those who have undergone endoscopic sinus surgery. | Recommendation against |
| 6. Antifungal solution | Clinicians should not routinely recommend nasal irrigation with solutions containing antifungal agents for the management of patients with chronic rhinosinusitis or those who have undergone endoscopic sinus surgery. | Recommendation against |
| 7a. Miscellaneous solution–hyaluronate | Clinicians may recommend nasal irrigation with solutions containing sodium hyaluronate to patients with chronic rhinosinusitis. | Option |
| 7b. Miscellaneous solution–xylitol | Clinicians may recommend nasal irrigation with solutions containing xylitol to patients post-endoscopic sinus surgery. | Option |
| 7c. Miscellaneous solution–honey | Clinicians should not routinely recommend nasal irrigation with solutions containing honey for the management of patients with chronic rhinosinusitis or those who have undergone endoscopic sinus surgery. | Recommendation against |
| 8. Irrigation solution preparation | Clinicians should recommend an appropriate irrigation fluid preparation method for patients with chronic rhinosinusitis or those who have undergone endoscopic sinus surgery. For irrigation fluid, bottled or distilled water should preferably be used. If tap water is used, boil it for at least 5 minutes and cool before use or expose it to ultraviolet light for at least 45 seconds. | Recommendation |
| 9. Equipment | Clinicians should recommend nasal irrigation performed by high-volume with low- or high-pressure delivery rather than low-volume with low- or high-pressure delivery in patients with chronic rhinosinusitis. | Recommendation |
| 10. Disinfection | Clinicians should recommend the following techniques for appropriate irrigation equipment care to patients with chronic rhinosinusitis or those who have undergone endoscopic sinus surgery. Irrigation equipment (according to the equipment material and manufacturer’s recommendations, if possible) should be boiled (for more than 2 minutes) or microwaved for 1 minute and 30 seconds regularly before and after use. | Recommendation |
| 11. Posture | Clinicians may recommend the head down-and-forward position as being better for high-volume nasal irrigation, whereas the nose-to-ceiling position is more effective at delivering low-volume nasal irrigation. | Option |
Fig. 2.Posture for nasal irrigation. Two head positions: (A) head down-and-forward position and (B) nose-to-ceiling position.