Factors affecting upper airway control of NSAID‐exacerbated respiratory disease: A real‐world study of 167 patients

Abstract Background Nonsteroidal anti‐inflammatory drug (NSAID) exacerbated respiratory disease (N‐ERD) is a triad with asthma, chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps, and NSAID intolerance. Uncontrolled N‐ERD forms a major public health problem due to frequent and difficult‐to‐treat exacerbations...

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Main Authors: Annina Lyly, Anu Laulajainen‐Hongisto, Heikki Turpeinen, Seija I. Vento, Jyri Myller, Jura Numminen, Saara Sillanpää, Johanna Sahlman, Paula Kauppi, Sanna Toppila‐Salmi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021-03-01
Series:Immunity, Inflammation and Disease
Subjects:
CRS
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/iid3.347
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spelling doaj-5dfd3b06c3094c74b146fba01ca5c6852021-02-04T13:00:55ZengWileyImmunity, Inflammation and Disease2050-45272021-03-0191808910.1002/iid3.347Factors affecting upper airway control of NSAID‐exacerbated respiratory disease: A real‐world study of 167 patientsAnnina Lyly0Anu Laulajainen‐Hongisto1Heikki Turpeinen2Seija I. Vento3Jyri Myller4Jura Numminen5Saara Sillanpää6Johanna Sahlman7Paula Kauppi8Sanna Toppila‐Salmi9Inflammation Center, Skin and Allergy Hospital University of Helsinki and Helsinki University Hospital Helsinki FinlandInflammation Center, Skin and Allergy Hospital University of Helsinki and Helsinki University Hospital Helsinki FinlandInflammation Center, Skin and Allergy Hospital University of Helsinki and Helsinki University Hospital Helsinki FinlandDepartment of Otorhinolaryngology—Head and Neck Surgery University of Helsinki and Helsinki University Hospital Helsinki FinlandDepartment of Otorhinolaryngology Päijät‐Häme Central Hospital Lahti FinlandDepartment of Otorhinolaryngology University of Tampere, Faculty of Medicine and Life Sciences and Tampere University Hospital Tampere FinlandDepartment of Otorhinolaryngology University of Tampere, Faculty of Medicine and Life Sciences and Tampere University Hospital Tampere FinlandDepartment of Otorhinolaryngology Kuopio University Hospital Kuopio FinlandInflammation Center, Skin and Allergy Hospital University of Helsinki and Helsinki University Hospital Helsinki FinlandInflammation Center, Skin and Allergy Hospital University of Helsinki and Helsinki University Hospital Helsinki FinlandAbstract Background Nonsteroidal anti‐inflammatory drug (NSAID) exacerbated respiratory disease (N‐ERD) is a triad with asthma, chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps, and NSAID intolerance. Uncontrolled N‐ERD forms a major public health problem due to frequent and difficult‐to‐treat exacerbations and/or requiring putatively frequent endoscopic sinus surgeries (ESS). Our aim was to study factors affecting control of N‐ERD. Methods Retrospective patient record data (patient characteristics, prior sinus surgeries, follow‐up data in 2020) from 167 N‐ERD patients undergoing consultation at three tertiary hospitals from 2001 to 2017 was used. Outcome measurements reflecting uncontrolled N‐ERD were revision ESS, corticosteroids/biological therapy, and antibiotic courses during 2016–2020. Associations were analyzed by using nonparametric tests, Cox's proportional hazard, and binary logistic regression models. Results Nasal polyp eosinophilia increased the risk of revision surgery during the follow‐up (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR] 3.21, confidence interval 1.23–8.38). Also baseline oral corticosteroids (OCS; HR, 1.73, 1.04–2.89) and baseline surgery without total ethmoidectomy increased the risk of revision ESS (HR, 2.17, 1.07–4.42) in unadjusted models. In addition, both baseline OCS (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] 2.78, 1.23–6.26) and a history of ≥4 previous ESS (aOR, 2.15, 0.98–4.70) were associated with the use of OCS/biological therapy during the follow‐up, but not with high number of antibiotics. Conclusions Nasal polyp eosinophilia, baseline OCS, and a history of recurrent ESS predict uncontrolled N‐ERD. These factors might be clinically useful in risk‐estimation of uncontrolled disease and for organizing follow‐ups. Prospective cohort studies with larger sample size are needed to further study the factors affecting the upper airway control of N‐ERD.https://doi.org/10.1002/iid3.347asthmaCRSdisease controleosinophilianasal polypsN‐ERD
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Annina Lyly
Anu Laulajainen‐Hongisto
Heikki Turpeinen
Seija I. Vento
Jyri Myller
Jura Numminen
Saara Sillanpää
Johanna Sahlman
Paula Kauppi
Sanna Toppila‐Salmi
spellingShingle Annina Lyly
Anu Laulajainen‐Hongisto
Heikki Turpeinen
Seija I. Vento
Jyri Myller
Jura Numminen
Saara Sillanpää
Johanna Sahlman
Paula Kauppi
Sanna Toppila‐Salmi
Factors affecting upper airway control of NSAID‐exacerbated respiratory disease: A real‐world study of 167 patients
Immunity, Inflammation and Disease
asthma
CRS
disease control
eosinophilia
nasal polyps
N‐ERD
author_facet Annina Lyly
Anu Laulajainen‐Hongisto
Heikki Turpeinen
Seija I. Vento
Jyri Myller
Jura Numminen
Saara Sillanpää
Johanna Sahlman
Paula Kauppi
Sanna Toppila‐Salmi
author_sort Annina Lyly
title Factors affecting upper airway control of NSAID‐exacerbated respiratory disease: A real‐world study of 167 patients
title_short Factors affecting upper airway control of NSAID‐exacerbated respiratory disease: A real‐world study of 167 patients
title_full Factors affecting upper airway control of NSAID‐exacerbated respiratory disease: A real‐world study of 167 patients
title_fullStr Factors affecting upper airway control of NSAID‐exacerbated respiratory disease: A real‐world study of 167 patients
title_full_unstemmed Factors affecting upper airway control of NSAID‐exacerbated respiratory disease: A real‐world study of 167 patients
title_sort factors affecting upper airway control of nsaid‐exacerbated respiratory disease: a real‐world study of 167 patients
publisher Wiley
series Immunity, Inflammation and Disease
issn 2050-4527
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Abstract Background Nonsteroidal anti‐inflammatory drug (NSAID) exacerbated respiratory disease (N‐ERD) is a triad with asthma, chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps, and NSAID intolerance. Uncontrolled N‐ERD forms a major public health problem due to frequent and difficult‐to‐treat exacerbations and/or requiring putatively frequent endoscopic sinus surgeries (ESS). Our aim was to study factors affecting control of N‐ERD. Methods Retrospective patient record data (patient characteristics, prior sinus surgeries, follow‐up data in 2020) from 167 N‐ERD patients undergoing consultation at three tertiary hospitals from 2001 to 2017 was used. Outcome measurements reflecting uncontrolled N‐ERD were revision ESS, corticosteroids/biological therapy, and antibiotic courses during 2016–2020. Associations were analyzed by using nonparametric tests, Cox's proportional hazard, and binary logistic regression models. Results Nasal polyp eosinophilia increased the risk of revision surgery during the follow‐up (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR] 3.21, confidence interval 1.23–8.38). Also baseline oral corticosteroids (OCS; HR, 1.73, 1.04–2.89) and baseline surgery without total ethmoidectomy increased the risk of revision ESS (HR, 2.17, 1.07–4.42) in unadjusted models. In addition, both baseline OCS (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] 2.78, 1.23–6.26) and a history of ≥4 previous ESS (aOR, 2.15, 0.98–4.70) were associated with the use of OCS/biological therapy during the follow‐up, but not with high number of antibiotics. Conclusions Nasal polyp eosinophilia, baseline OCS, and a history of recurrent ESS predict uncontrolled N‐ERD. These factors might be clinically useful in risk‐estimation of uncontrolled disease and for organizing follow‐ups. Prospective cohort studies with larger sample size are needed to further study the factors affecting the upper airway control of N‐ERD.
topic asthma
CRS
disease control
eosinophilia
nasal polyps
N‐ERD
url https://doi.org/10.1002/iid3.347
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