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DYNAMICS OF CLINICAL SYMPTOMS UNDER THE INFLUENCE OF ENDOTYPE-ORIENTED PHARMACOTHERAPY OF CHRONIC RHINOSINUSITIS WITH NASAL POLYPOSIS

Journal: Art of Medicine (Vol.6, No. 3)

Publication Date:

Authors : ;

Page : 64-70

Keywords : airways; rhinosinusitis; polyps; ther-apy;

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Abstract

Chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS) is a clin-ical syndrome including several clinical phenotypes and endotypes with differences in pathophysiology. Chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyposis (NP) is the most severe 703(23)липень-вересень,2022ISSN2521-1455 (Print)ISSN2523-4250 (Online) «Art of Medicine»CRS phenotype associated with treatment resistance and frequent recurrence after surgery. Among patients with CRS with NP, up to 96% have radiological changes that demonstrate damage to the paranasal sinuses and indicate a diffuse lesion. Pharmacotherapy based on endotyping us-ing aminocapronic acid (ACA) competitively inhibits plasminogen and plasmin formation, inhibits C3a and C5a, which can affect the pathophysiological mechanisms of polypus growth, is promising.The aim of the study:to evaluate the clinical ef-fectiveness of the additional appointment of ACA in com-parison with patients receiving standard therapy of CRS with NP according to clinical recommendations.Material and methods. The study included 120 outpatients, divided into two groups: the main (n-60) and the control (n-60) ones. The main group (n-60) included 35 (58.3%) men and 25 (41.7%) women, the control group (n-60) included 32 (53.3%) men and 28 (46.7%) of women. The average age of the main group was 45.8 years; the control group was 47.0 years. Patients were prescribed basic treatment, but patients in the main group were addi-tionally prescribed aminocapronic acid (ACA). The eval-uation of the treatment effectiveness was based on the analysis of the dynamics of clinical symptoms: rhinorrhea, postnasal drip, nasal congestion, reduced sense of smell according to the SNOT 22 scale (from 0 to 5 points for each symptom) at V2 (51), V3 (101), V4 (201) and V5 (301) compared to V0, as well as the presence of indica-tions for surgical treatment were determined at V3.Results. The use of aminocapronic acid in CRS with NP contributes to a reliable reduction in the severity of the main clinical symptoms (rhinorrhea, postnasal drip, nasal congestion, reduced sense of smell) at V2 and V3 in comparison with patients of the control group. This pro-videda statistically significant difference at 25% in the re-duction of operated patients: 56.7% in the main group ver-sus 81.7% in the control group (p<0.05). Conservative treatment was continued for 43.3% of patients in the main group and for 18.3% of patientsin the control group (p<0.05). Such a difference in the dynamic of symptoms regression can be explained by the peculiarities of the bio-logical action of ACA, which can influence the pathophys-iological features that characterize the endotype of diffuse eosinophilic CRS with NP. After the removal of the oper-ated patients, the groups did not differ significantly differ in the dynamics of the regression of rhinorrhea, postnasal drip, nasal congestion, decreased sense of smell at V4 and V5 (p>0.05). Differencesin the results of treatment are at-tributed to the clinical effects of ACA, since the group characteristics of the patients were commensurable. Conclusions:•the use of ACA in addition to the basic therapy in pa-tients suffering from CRS with NP contributesto a sig-nificant reduction in the severity of the main clinical symptoms in the first 10 days of treatment compared to patients in the control group;•the positive dynamics of clinical symptoms correlates with a reliable, at 25%, reduction in the number ofsur-gical interventions.

Last modified: 2022-11-09 05:55:19