View clinical trials related to Chronic Sinusitis.
Filter by:A Case control study with 150 cases and 50 controls will be conducted. Immunologic (cytokines measurements in nasal secretions and sinonasal tissues), histopathologic (tissue eosinophilia) and clinical parameters (Lund-Mackay and Lund-Kennedy score, lung function tests), surveys (SNOT- 22, SF-36 quality of life survey) will be compared between different groups of patients
Stent-001 study is a randomized controlled clinical trial with the steroid-eluting Sinus in 96 chronic rhinosinusitis patients with uncontrolled postoperative symptoms
This is a multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled Phase II clinical trial to evaluate the efficacy, safety and pharmacokinetics of TQC2731 injection in the treatment of Chronic Sinusitis with Nasal Polyps.
The goal of this clinical trial is to learn about the safety and effectiveness of Novabel bioabsorbable steroid-releasing stent in chronic sinusitis. The main questions it aims to answer are: - The safety of this device for the chronic sinusitis - The effectiveness of this device for the chronic sinusitis Participants will be implanted bioabsorbable steroid-releasing stents after FESS surgery. Participants will be asked to be back to the clinic for follow-up 14 days, 30 days, 90 days, 180 days and 360 days after procedure. Researchers will compare test device and marketed device to see if the safety and effectiveness between these two devices are non-inferior.
Multicenter, phase III, randomized, blinded, controlled, parallel group.
Functional endoscopic sinus surgery (FESS) is the pimary surgical treatment of CRS, characterized with the preservation of nasal structure and function.But the control of disease by surgery has been unsatisfactory. Recent studies have shown that patients with recurrent CRSwNP (usually with severe eosinophilic inflammation), more radical surgery may be more effective. The purpose of this prospective and randomized study is to determine the effect of endoscopic sinus surgery for extensive mucosal removal in patients with eosinophilic chronic rhinosinusitus with nasal polyps.
The overarching objective of this study is to determine the clinical effectiveness of dupilumab for the treatment of CRS that includes several potential disease endotypes with the exclusion of the nasal polyp cluster that has previously been determined. The additional information gained from secondary and exploratory outcomes will help provide important insight for applied research studies and may also provide practical guidance to clinicians on how to select patients for treatment.
Chronic rhinosinusitis presents with a plethora of symptoms including non-rhinologic symptoms such as depression, sleep disturbances & the more recently recognized cognitive dysfunction. It has recently been identified that sinus specific treatments such as endoscopic sinus surgery can improve cognitive outcomes in patients with cognitive deficit secondary to chronic inflammation in the upper and lower airway. However, it remains to be seen whether or not offering surgery to these patients at an earlier date has an impact on the degree of improvement on cognitive function in comparison to patients who have to wait long periods for their treatment.
Asthma and chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps (CRSwNP) are frequently described as unified airway inflammatory diseases. Both heavily impacts quality of life with substantial productivity loss. They share the same pathophysiologic pattern based upon proTh2 immune response with blood eosinophils recruitment. Eosinophils are the major actor of persistent mucosal inflammation by promoting their own survival, by attracting other inflammatory cells and by producing cytotoxic proteins involved in mucosal remodeling. Promising anti-Th2 therapeutic approaches (i.e.anti-IgE, anti-interleukin 5 (IL-5), anti-IL-4, anti-IL-13) are considered as effective alternative options to long-term corticosteroid treatment. Their advantage in recalcitrant CRSwNP is under consideration. Moreover, we still need to delineate the good responders to improve theirs indications. The objective is to assess blood eosinophil immunophenotypes in asthma or CRSwNP. Flow cytometric expression of activation markers on eosinophil membrane will be compared with a group of healthy subjects. Innovative data on eosinophil involvement in airway diseases will be obtained. The major outcome will be to depict patients' endotypes for a better selection of immunotherapies.
To assess the efficacy of intra-sinus installation of a poloxamer gel that releases antibiotics and corticosteroids topically after balloon sinuplasty in chronic sinusitis patients with or without polyps. This is a single-blinded Randomized Control Trial study, in which every patient receives active gel on one side and placebo on the other (L or R to be randomly selected).