Rhinosinusitis
Rhinosinusitis
Rhinosinusitis
Rhino-Sinusitis
• Persistent/chronic
10 cm – >12 weeks
– No complete resolution
No Worst of symptoms
possible
Acute rhinosinusitis
Intensity of symptoms
Chronic rhinosinusitis
and signs
Acute exacerbation
of chronic rhinosinusitis
12
Weeks
Incidence and Diagnosis of
Rhinosinusitis
Incidence
(Millions) Diagnosed (%)
US 37 65
Japan 11 48
Germany 12 75
France 7 70
Italy 5 55
Spain 4 56
Source: Decision Resources Report.
UK 8 71
Acute Rhinosinusitis Continuum
Spectrum of acute rhinosinusitis based on clinical
criteria
0 5 10 15
Days
• Eliminate infection
• Reduce inflammation
• Improve symptoms
Acute Rhinosinusitis Treatment
• Acute rhinosinusitis is usually a self-limiting disease
• Treatment can be symptomatic in mild disease
• Antibiotics should be reserved only for persistent moderate
to severe disease
• Early treatment of inflammation allows sinus drainage and
helps to prevent bacterial infection
• Antibiotic prescriptions should be based on local resistance
patterns
• Local corticosteroids are an effective therapy
(mometasone furoate) in
Rhinosinusitis
Why Mometasone
Monotherapy Treatment?
• Value of antibiotics in • Facilitates symptom resolution
question – Inhibits local inflammation
– American Academy of Family – Relieves ostial obstruction
Physicians
– Restores mucociliary function
– Canadian Medical Association
– Stimulates host defense and
– Agency for Health Care Policy
and Research repair mechanisms
– Promotes bacterial clearance
• Rx recommendation
– Symptomatic therapy and • Does not increase bacterial
watchful waiting prior to infections, including in allergic
antibiotics rhinitis
• German guidelines do not • Stems progression to bacterial
recommend antibiotic use infection in experimental models
NASONEX® vs Antibiotic Monotherapy in
Acute Rhinosinusitis: Study Design
15-day 14-day
treatment phase* follow-up phase
Placebo (n=252)
*Patients randomized to amoxicillin received active treatment for 10 days, according to standard practice.
Meltzer et al. J Allergy Clin Immunol. In press. 2005.
NASONEX Monotherapy in Acute
Rhinosinusitis: Effect on Major
Symptom Score
Mean AM/PM Major Symptom
5
Score (Days 2-15)
*
4 †
*
3
NASONEX NASONEX Amoxicillin Placebo
200 µg od 200 µg bid 0.5 g tid
5
Score (Days 2-15)
*
*†
4
3
NASONEX NASONEX Amoxicillin Placebo
200 µg od 200 µg bid 0.5 g tid
* † *†
0.4
Congestion Facial pain Headache Rhinorrhea
1.5
1.2
P=0.001*
1.1
1
NASONEX® NASONEX® Amoxicillin Placebo
200 µg od 200 µg bid 0.5 g tid (N=213)
(N=216) (N=212) (N=226)
All P values vs placebo
*P=0.013 vs amoxicillin.
Meltzer et al. J Allergy Clin Immunol. In press. 2005.
NASONEX® in Acute Rhinosinusitis:
Treatment Failures/Recurrences
No. of Patients (%)
Failures Recurrences
Placebo
*P=0.017 vs placebo.
27 (10.7%) 17 (7.0%)
Meltzer et al. J Allergy Clin Immunol. In press. 2005.
NASONEX® in Acute Rhinosinusitis:
Summary of Adverse Events
No. of Patients (%)
NASONEX® NASONEX® Amoxicillin
200 µg od 200 µg bid 0.5 g tid Placebo
Any adverse event 86 (35.4%) 85 (36.2%) 84 (33.5%) 96 (38.1%)
Headache 16 (6.6%) 10 (4.3%) 15 (6.0%) 21 (8.3%)
Epistaxis* 9 (3.7%) 14 (6.0%) 13 (5.2%) 13 (5.2%)
Any GI event 27 (11.1%) 31 (13.2%) 28 (11.2%) 33 (13.1%)
Abdominal pain 5 (2.1%) 7 (3.0%) 3 (1.2%) 3 (1.2%)
Diarrhea 7 (2.9%) 6 (2.6%) 7 (2.8%) 10 (4.0%)
Nausea 9 (3.7%) 8 (3.4%) 9 (3.6%) 7 (2.8%)
*Epistaxis was defined as a wide range of bleeding episodes, from frank bleeding to bloody nasal
discharge to flecks of blood in the mucus.
Meltzer et al. J Allergy Clin Immunol. In press. 2005.
NASONEX® Monotherapy in Acute
Rhinosinusitis: Conclusions
• NASONEX® 200 µg bid monotherapy was statistically
superior to placebo and to amoxicillin for total and major
symptom relief in acute rhinosinusitis
• The major symptom score for amoxicillin was not
significantly different from placebo
• NASONEX® 200 µg bid relieves the problems considered
most important by patients, especially runny nose, need to
blow nose, and nasal discharge
Adjunctive NASONEX® in Acute
Rhinosinusitis: Study Design
Baseline exam (Day -1) ACP 875 mg bid +
History
NASONEX 400 μg bid
Symptoms
Physician
ACP 875 mg bid + evaluation
placebo CT Scan
Symptom diary
for 21 days bid
Improvement in
-45 -40
*
-50 -50
†
* *
-55 -60
* †
†
-60 -70
*P<0.05 vs placebo.
†P<0.02 vs placebo.
8 † * *
† *
symptom score
†
†
†
‡
6
†
4
Placebo (baseline = 11.61)
NASONEX 200 μg bid (baseline = 11.57)
2
NASONEX 400 μg bid (baseline = 11.61)
0
1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15
Days of Treatment
*P<0.05 NASONEX 400 μg bid vs placebo; †P<0.05 both doses vs. placebo;
‡P<0.05 NASONEX 200 μg bid vs placebo.
Nasal burning 1 1 2
Headache 2 1 2
*Occurring in ≥ 2% of patients.
†pistaxis was defined as a wide range of bleeding episodes, from frank bleeding to bloody nasischarge
Physician
ACP 875 mg bid +
Placebo evaluation
CT scan
Symptom diary
for 21 days bid
0 0
Total symptom
score
*P≤0.01 vs placebo.
†P<0.05 vs placebo.
*
Improvement in total
*
symptom score
0
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16
Days of treatment
*P<0.05 vs placebo.
†P<0.01 vs placebo.
Pathogenic?
All fungus?
Chronic Rhinosinusitis:
Cytokine/Mediator Profile
• IL-1α/β
• IL-6
• IL-8
• TNF-α
• IL-3
• GM-CSF
• ICAM-1
• Myeloperoxidase
• ECP
• No VCAM-1
• No IL-5 Neutrophilic inflammation with minor eosinophilia
Medical treatment
Topical Systemic
CT scan
Surgery
Chronic Rhinosinusitis:
Medical Treatment
• Steroids
– Topical
– Systemic
• Antibiotics: short/long courses
• Douching
• Mucolytics, immunomodulators,
immunostimulants, bacterial lysates
• Antifungals
European Guidelines for Management of
Chronic Rhinosinusitis
• Recommendations for GPs
– Topical steroids
– Nasal douches
– Antihistamines and allergen avoidance in allergic patients
• Recommendations for ENT specialists
– Mild symptoms
• Topical steroids
• Nasal douches
• Long-term antibiotics if previous treatment fails after 3 months
– Moderate/severe symptoms
• Long-term antibiotics additional to topical steroids
• Nasal douches
• For treatment failure after 3 months, CT scan and consider surgery
Level of
Therapy Evidence Recommendation Relevance
Long-term
III C Yes
oral antibiotic
Yes, for
Nasal saline III (no data
C symptomatic
douche on single use)
relief
Ib: Evidence from at least 1 randomized, controlled trial. A: Consistent level 1 studies
III: Evidence from nonexperimental, descriptive studies, C: Level IV studies or extrapolations
such as comparative studies, correlation studies, and from level 2 or 3 studies
case-control studies.