To evaluate the efficacy of Doxycycline as an adjunct to systemic steroids in the treatment of chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps
Chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps (CRSwNP) is a disease of the nose and paranasal sinuses characterized by mucosal thickening and polyp formation. The prevalence of CRSwNP in the general population ranges between 1 and 4%. It mostly affects adult individuals. The treatment of CRSwNP can include the use of steroids, antibiotics, saline nasal spray, mucolytics, topical/systemic decongestants, topical anticholinergics, anti-leukotrienes or receptor blockers, and antihistamines. Steroids have a multitude of effects, including inhibition of cytokine synthesis, reduction of the number of eosinophils and activated eosinophils, anti-oedema effects and reduction of transudation. Topical corticosteroid therapy is not effective in all patients, leading to the use of systemic glucocorticosteroids and/or sinus surgery to control the disease. As a new approach, antibiotics are being used to treat CRSwNP particularly in patients with disease exacerbated by the Staphylococcus aureus enterotoxin. Antibiotics with anti- inflammatory effects can be used to treat patients with chronic rhinosinusitis without polyps, which might be the precursor to CRSwNP. Long-term treatment with these drugs, in selected cases, may be effective when corticosteroids fail. Doxycycline has dual action: it has well described, broad-spectrum antibacterial activity against S aureus as well as anti-inflammatory properties. It appears to be effective in treatment of several chronic inflammatory airway diseases.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
60
Oral Doxycycline will be added to prednisolone as a comparison to using prednisolone as a sole therapy for the treatment of nasal polyps associated with chronic rhinosinusitis
Prednisolone will be used in both arms as a sole therapy in one and together with doxycycline in the other
Assiut University Hospital
Asyut, Egypt
Polyp Size Score by Nasal Endoscopy
Every patient will undergo nasal endoscopy at the initial visit and every follow-up visit using a modified Lildholdt scoring system and given scores from 0 to 4. The total nasal polyp score is the sum of the scores from the right and left nostrils. 0 = No polyps. 1. = Small polyps in the middle meatus not reaching below the inferior border of the middle concha. 2. = Polyps reaching below the lower boarder of the middle turbinate. 3. = Large polyps reaching the lower border of the inferior turbinate or polyps medial to the middle concha. 4. = Large polyps causing almost complete obstruction of the inferior meatus.
Time frame: after 12 weeks from the start of treatment
Radiological Evaluation
Multislice computed tomography scan of the nose and paranasal sinuses will be done before starting the treatment and at the end of the follow-up period (12 weeks) using the Lund-Mackay (LMK) scoring system where each sinus (maxillary, anterior ethmoidal, posterior ethmoidal, frontal, sphenoidal) is scored for opacification (0, no opacity; 1, partial opacity; 2, total opacity), and the osteo-meatal complex is scored 0 (no obstruction) or 2 (obstruction). The unilateral score goes from 0 to 12 whereas the bilateral score goes from 0 to 24
Time frame: after 12 weeks from the start of treatment
Laboratory Measures
Complete Blood count specifically the eosinophilic count (both relative and absolute) will be documented at the initial visit and at the end of treatment. Values of each group will be compared to each other.
Time frame: after 12 weeks from the start of treatment
Symptomatology
Using a questionnaire, all subjects will be asked to evaluate five symptoms (nasal obstruction, Rhinorrhea, postnasal discharge, hyposmia and facial pain) from 0 to 4. 0 = no symptoms 1. = mild symptoms 2. = moderate symptoms 3. = severe symptoms 4. = very severe symptoms (intolerable) This will be assessed at the screening visit and follow-up visits at 3, 8 and 12 weeks as a sum of the five individual symptoms of a total score of 20.
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Time frame: after 12 weeks from the start of treatment