Asthma Clinical Trial
Official title:
Sinonasal Functional Impact of Endoscopic Surgery for Bilateral Polyposis on Bronchial Inflammation, Control and Lung Function in Asthma
Inflammation of the nasal and bronchial mucosa characterizing rhinitis and asthma are probably manifestations of the same disease. Multiple functional observations, pathogenic and clinical support that assertion. It is noteworthy that most asthma patients, who underwent a nasal endoscopic polypectomy, improve your asthma after surgery. This improvement would be related to the administration of oral steroids that these patients usually receive after surgery, or the disappearance of nasal discomfort caused by nasal polyps to improve ventilation. But this does not explain why this improvement, in some cases lasting for months after the operation, and without receiving oral steroids. It is speculated that severe nasal inflammation due to nasal polyps stimulate the bone marrow to produce more eosinophils, an increased supply of blood eosinophils, and consequently, a major bronchial eosinophilic inflammation, aggravating asthma. However, it is noteworthy that studies have evaluated the clinical impact in asthma after endoscopic nasal polypectomy, are scarce or performed on a small number of cases, the results are inconsistent and do not allow categorically whether or not such positive association. And more importantly, none of them included measurements of airway inflammation and hypothesized relationship between bronchial eosinophilic inflammation and nasal polyposis, aclarar.La remains finding that provides nasal endoscopic polypectomy objective improvement of severe asthma it could be a future therapeutic option to consider in patients with asthma and rhinosinusal polyposis.
Sinonasal polyposis (SP) is a chronic inflammatory disease of the lining of the nasal
passages and sinuses, with a prevalence of approximately 2-3% of the general population. The
prevalence of asthma in patients diagnosed with SP is much greater than that of the general
population and can reach half of the cases and indicate a more severe phenotype and worse
control in asthmatic patients without SP. It is possible that the pathophysiologic mechanisms
underlying the development of SP and concomitant asthma are the same and both processes can
be considered the same disease.
Recommendations of major clinical practice guidelines for the treatment of SP include
administration of intranasal topical steroids at high doses, and in subjects who do not
respond to this treatment or are more severe, administering a course of systemic steroids
orally for 10-14 days or surgical intervention including polypectomy and removal of the
diseased mucosa endoscopically, known as functional endoscopic sinus surgery (FESS).
In this context, it is noteworthy that most asthma patients, who underwent functional
endoscopic sinus surgery for bilateral polyposis (FESS-BP) stated it dramatically improved
their asthma after surgery. This improvement could be related to the effect of oral steroids
these patients often receive after surgery, or the disappearance of nasal discomfort caused
by nasal polyps as ventilation improves after the intervention. However, these reasons do not
sufficiently explain the fact that this improvement, in some cases extends for months after
surgery, when patients are no longer receiving oral steroids.
It has been speculated that severe nasal inflammation which involves the presence of nasal
polyps would constantly stimulate the bone marrow, causing on the one hand increased
production of eosinophils and the other an increase in adhesiveness, and thus, an important
eosinophilic bronchial inflammation. This is in line with a usual clinical observation
according to which patients with asthma and sinonasal polyposis, often suffer more severe
asthma; and severe sinus inflammation is one of the aggravating factors recognized in severe
uncontrolled asthma.
However, studies that have assessed the clinical impact in asthma after FESS-BP, are only a
few or have been performed on a small number of cases. Consequently, the results are
inconsistent and do not allow to categorically establish whether this positive association
exists or not. Most importantly, however, none of them included measurements of bronchial
inflammation in the study variables, so that the hypothesis of the possible relationship
between eosinophilic bronchial inflammation and nasal polyposis remains without having been
tested.
Moreover, the finding that the FESS-BP provides an objective improvement of asthma, could be
a future therapeutic option to consider in patients with severe asthma and sinonasal
polyposis.
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