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Evaluation of Two Methods of Olfactory Rehabilitation in Post-viral Loss of Smell: Classic and Intensive (Odorat-Covid)

C

Central Hospital, Nancy, France

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Olfaction Disorders

Treatments

Other: smell the odors of the olfactory rehabilitation kit according to the classic or intensive method

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04598763
2020PI098

Details and patient eligibility

About

One of the most common causes of loss of smell is upper respiratory tract infection. These disorders can be quantitative (hyposmia or anosmia) or qualitative (parosmia or phantosmia). Loss of smell has been found as a major and frequent clinical sign of Sars Cov2 infection (more than 50% of patients screened at the CHU Nancy). Spontaneous recovery remains possible. It usually occurs in the first month . But when symptoms persist, the therapeutic management of post-viral anosmias is poorly codified in the literature. Olfactory rehabilitation could allow faster recovery and better quality, but the published protocols are numerous and could only be tested on small inhomogeneous series of patients (mixture of post-viral and post-traumatic hypo-ansomy). The significant increase in the population of patients suffering from post-viral anosmia following the current pandemic situation makes it possible to consider a prospective study aiming to compare two olfactory rehabilitation protocols: "classic" and "intensive" in a population of patients. suffering only from post-viral hypoanosmia.

Hypothesis: Intensive or classic olfactory rehabilitation allows better results than spontaneous recovery

Full description

80 patients will be recruited from among the patients consulting the otorhinolaryngology department of the Nancy CHRU for the assessment of viral post-infectious olfactory disorders.

The inclusion visit will be carried out during a standard routine care consultation with the following:

  • an endoscopic endonasal examination
  • the olfactory assessment (evaluation of smell by self-assessment, Dynachron-olfaction questionnaire, olfactory test by Sniffin 'Stick)

At the end of this assessment and after having received the information on the study and signed the consent form, the patients confirmed to be hypo-anosmic will then be randomized into 2 groups:

  • "classic" olfactory rehabilitation group
  • "intensive" olfactory rehabilitation group The rehabilitation kits (8 jars or 4 jars depending on the randomization group) will be provided to the patient with therapeutic education in their use.

The patient will carry out olfactory rehabilitation (intensive or classic) at home twice a day (morning and evening) for 32 weeks (i.e. 448 sessions). The patient will smell each odor for 10 seconds with an interval of 10 seconds between odors. Each training will be recorded by the patient in his olfactory rehabilitation agenda.

The patient will go again for a follow-up consultation for the renewal of his olfactory assessment at 4 months (follow-up visit 1) and at 8 months (follow-up visit 2) post-inclusion as part of the routine care of disorders of the smell post virus infection. In addition to the olfactory assessment during these visits, the investigator will also verify that the rehabilitation schedule is being kept.

Enrollment

80 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Major patient
  • Patient with a sudden loss of smell> 5 weeks linked to a viral infection (including SARS-CoV-2) of the upper respiratory tract treated in the ENT department of the CHRU Nancy
  • Patient accepting olfactory rehabilitation
  • Patient presenting with hyposmia or anosmia (confirmed by the threshold and identification tests of the Sniffin 'Stick kit)
  • Patient affiliated to a social security scheme or beneficiary of such a scheme
  • Patient who has received full research information and signed an informed consent.

Exclusion criteria

  • Persons referred to in Articles L. 1121-5 to L. 1121-8 and L1122-2 of the Public Health Code:

Pregnant woman, parturient or nursing mother Person deprived of liberty by a judicial or administrative decision, Person undergoing psychiatric treatment under Articles L.3212-1 and L.3213-1 of the Public Health Code Minor (non-emancipated) Adult person subject to a legal protection measure (guardianship, curatorship, safeguard of justice) Adult person unable to express consent and who is not the subject of a legal protection measure

  • Qualitative smell disorder (cacosmia, hyperosmia, phantosmia, parosmia)
  • Neurological, post-traumatic, neurodegenerative, congenital odor disorders
  • Post-infectious loss of smell> 12 months

Trial design

Primary purpose

Other

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

80 participants in 2 patient groups

classic group
Other group
Description:
the "classic" group receives classic olfactory rehabilitation using 4 scents most used in the literature (rose, eucalyptus, lemon, clove)
Treatment:
Other: smell the odors of the olfactory rehabilitation kit according to the classic or intensive method
intensive
Other group
Description:
the "intensive" group receiving olfactory rehabilitation using 8 scents (rose, eucalyptus, lemon, cloves, strawberries, cut grass, lavender, spruce).
Treatment:
Other: smell the odors of the olfactory rehabilitation kit according to the classic or intensive method

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Julie Lecomte; Duc Trung NGUYEN

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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