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Several endoscopic scores have been developed to assess Chronic Rhinosinusitis severity like the Modified Lund-Kennedy (MLK). This is a simple score only based on endoscopic signs. We proposed a more descriptive Alsaleh-Javer Endoscopic Sinus Score (AJESS) system which assesses all sinuses and nasal passages based on participant's severity of symptoms too. This would be a more reliable and clinically valid CRS endoscopic score. We aim to study thE AJESS system in 100 participants with stable CRS and 30 participants CRS who are experiencing an exacerbation (worsening of CRS).
Full description
Chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS) is a prevalent inflammatory disorder of the nasal passages and sinuses associated with detrimental effects on quality of life and productivity as well as billions of dollars in healthcare expenses and lost productivity each year. Numerous endoscopic scoring systems have been developed to assess CRS disease severity such as the popular Modified Lund-Kennedy (MLK) score which assesses sinus cavities only based on 3 criteria (polyps, edema, and discharge) with small 0-2 integer scales. Yet, such systems at best have reported good to moderate reliabilities and weak to no correlation with patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) which should motivate further research to develop a more reliable and clinically valid CRS endoscopic scoring system, especially one which can better align the observed endoscopic signs of disease with the severity of symptoms reported by patients. In this study we propose a more descriptive Alsaleh-Javer Endoscopic Sinus Score (AJESS) system which assesses all sinuses and nasal passages with a numerical score of inflammation severity, alphabetical score for presence of CRS features, and an aggregated numerical score of overall disease severity. Our mixed-methods clinical study of 100 stable post-operative CRS patients and 30 post-operative CRS patients experiencing an exacerbation who are visiting St. Paul's Sinus Centre will gather both cross-sectional (1 visit, CRS stable) and prospective (2 follow-up visits approximately 2-4 weeks apart each, CRS flares) clinical data including two PROMs (SNOT-22, VAS) and an objective olfactory sensation test (Sniffin' Sticks TDI Score) to assess AJESS and MLK scores in terms of inter-rater reliability, test-retest reliability, correlation with clinical data, and responsiveness to changes in clinical data. Pending validation and head-to-head analysis with the MLK score, the AJESS system may be a more reliable and valid endoscopic scoring system for clinical practice and outcomes research in CRS.
Study goals and objectives
Research design
Participants visiting St. Paul's Sinus Centre who meet inclusion criteria and no exclusion criteria who are stable (N=100) and who are experiencing an exacerbation (N=30) will be approached at random and consented to the study. Encounters are expected to be 30 minutes each and participants experiencing a CRS or AFRS exacerbation will be expected to present for follow-up after 3 weeks (+/- 1 week) intervals for a second and a third encounter until their exacerbation are settled. The first encounter will collect relevant clinical data, endoscopic photos of 10 anatomic sites, patient-reported outcomes measures (PROMs, eg.SNOT-22, VAS) and olfactory sense test results (Sniffin' Sticks TDI score). Subsequent visits for exacerbated participants will collect the same endoscopic photos, PROMs and olfactory sense test results.
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130 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Atenea Pascual; Laura Samson
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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