Medical and surgical treatment outcomes in patients with chronic rhinosinusitis and immunodeficiency: a systematic review.

TitleMedical and surgical treatment outcomes in patients with chronic rhinosinusitis and immunodeficiency: a systematic review.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2021
AuthorsSamargandy S, Grose E, Chan Y, Monteiro E, Lee JM, Yip J
JournalInt Forum Allergy Rhinol
Volume11
Issue2
Pagination162-173
Date Published2021 02
ISSN2042-6984
KeywordsAdult, Chronic Disease, Endoscopy, Humans, Prospective Studies, Quality of Life, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Rhinitis, Sinusitis, Treatment Outcome
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Immunodeficiency is a risk factor for recalcitrant chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS). Currently, there is no consensus on effective treatment modalities for immunodeficient CRS patients. This review aims to evaluate the existing evidence on the treatment outcomes and its limitations in patients with CRS and immunodeficiency.

METHODS: MEDLINE, Embase, and the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL) were searched from inception to April 2019 for studies reporting measurable medical or surgical treatment outcomes for adult patients with CRS and underlying primary or secondary immunodeficiency.

RESULTS: Of the 2459 articles screened, 13 studies met the inclusion criteria: 2 prospective double-blind placebo-controlled trials, 2 prospective case-control studies, 2 prospective cohort studies, and 7 case series. The high degree of study heterogeneity precluded a meta-analysis. Antibiotic monotherapy was not linked with significant improvement in clinical, radiographic, or endoscopic outcomes. Immunoglobulin replacement therapy may potentially reduce the frequency of acute or chronic sinusitis in patients with primary immunodeficiency (PID) but may not improve their sinonasal symptoms. Outcomes from endoscopic sinus surgery (ESS) were reported in 8 studies, which found that surgery was linked with improvement in symptoms, disease-specific quality of life, endoscopy scores, and radiographic scores. The average reported ESS revision rate was 14%.

CONCLUSION: Patients with CRS and immunodeficiency likely benefit from ESS based on the available evidence. Data supporting medical therapy in this targeted population is limited overall, but there may be a potential role for immunoglobulin therapy in patients with PID and CRS.

DOI10.1002/alr.22647
Alternate JournalInt Forum Allergy Rhinol
PubMed ID32668102
Faculty Reference: 
Shireen Samargandy