The purpose of this study is to determine whether a low salicylate diet will improve the quality of life of patients with Aspirin Exacerbated Respiratory Disease (AERD).
Aspirin-exacerbated respiratory disease (AERD) is clinically diagnosed in patients who suffer from allergy to aspirin, asthma, nasal polyps, and chronic sinusitis. Patients with AERD are often resistant to medical management of nasal polyps, and require multiple endoscopic sinus surgeries to manage recurrences of nasal polyps. Control of AERD can be obtained through aspirin desensitization, which consists of taking aspirin every day. However, there are substantial risks and adverse side effects to taking moderate amounts of aspirin daily. Furthermore, patients experience progressively worsening nasal and respiratory disease even with complete avoidance of aspirin and other NSAIDs. The active and major component in aspirin/NSAIDs is salicylate, which is also found naturally in some foods. Diet modification is a cost-effective intervention that has the potential to provide long-term remission of AERD. Our study will evaluate whether a low salicylate diet, which is a more cost effective and benign intervention with minimal risks, will improve nasal, sinus or respiratory symptoms, such as congestion, sinusitis, smell, or asthma.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
80
Patients will avoid foods from the 'high salicylate' group completely. They can eat foods from the 'low salicylate' group freely and just eat foods from the medium group occasionally, and not in large amounts.
Patients will eat their usual diet.
Hamilton Health Sciences
Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
St. Joseph's Health Care
London, Ontario, Canada
St. Michael's Hospital
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Mount Sinai Hospital
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Change in SNOT-22 scores from Baseline
As this is a crossover study, all participants will complete the SNOT-22 questionnaire at the beginning of the study. After 6 weeks of their assigned diet (normal vs low salicylate), they will complete the SNOT-22 questionnaire to see if there are any differences in subjective nasal and sinus symptoms. After 6 weeks, the participants cross over to the other diet and they will complete the SNOT-22 questionnaire again in another 6 weeks when the study ends.
Time frame: 6 weeks and 12 weeks
Change in Lund-Kennedy Endoscopic Score from Baseline
As this is a crossover study, all participants will be evaluated for the Lund-Kennedy Endoscopic Score at the beginning of the study. After 6 weeks of their assigned diet (normal vs low salicylate), they will be re-evaluated in clinic to see if there are any differences in endoscopy findings. After 6 weeks, the participants cross over to the other diet and they will have a final endoscopic evaluation in another 6 weeks when the study ends.
Time frame: 6 weeks and 12 weeks
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