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the Relationship Between Allergic Rhinitis and the Risk of Symptom in Patients With Mild COVID-19

Q

qinxiu zhang

Status

Completed

Conditions

COVID-19
Allergic Rhinitis

Treatments

Other: no intervention

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05753241
CDUTCM20230301

Details and patient eligibility

About

At present, most studies mainly focussed on severe patients, and there was no comparison of symptom differences between AR patients and healthy people with mild infection to evaluate the symptoms of AR patients during infection and to provide preventive treatment in advance. So this experiment was designed.

Full description

After the end of this large-scale infection, the investigators analyzed the re-diagnosis of patients with allergic rhinitis (AR) at the Otolaryngology Clinic, and found significant differences in symptoms between AR and non-AR patients. AR patients had more serious nasal and pharyngeal symptoms. In previous studies on the correlation between allergic diseases and COVID-19 infection, AR was found to be a protective factor to reduce COVID-19 infection and the risk of severe disease . In contrast, a cohort study in South Korea found that AR worsened COVID-19 infection . These studies mainly focussed on severe patients, and there was no comparison of symptom differences between AR patients and healthy people with mild infection.

Allergy may lead to the overall damage of nasal mucosa due to the mechanical and immune defense function of the virus. Immunotherapy will significantly reduce the number and severity of upper respiratory tract infections (including children's common cold). The investigators hypothesized that AR is more likely to aggravate symptoms after infection, while allergen immunotherapy (AIT) may reduce the risk of symptoms as a protective factor for symptoms after AR virus infection. Therefore, the investigators conducted a retrospective analysis on the risk of symptoms after COVID-19 infection in patients with AR, and compared the difference of symptoms after COVID-19 infection in patients with AIT and non-AIT AR.

Enrollment

1,100 patients

Sex

All

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • all participants completed at least one antigen or nucleic acid test and the results were positive.
  • the diagnoses of AR met the international diagnostic standards for AR. The participants had obvious clinical symptoms and the allergen test was positive.

Exclusion criteria

  • suspected new infected person with symptoms( no antigen or nucleic acid test and the results were nagetive )
  • Participants requiring ICU admission after COVID-19 infection-

Trial design

1,100 participants in 3 patient groups

healthy group (HG)
Description:
Participants were grouped according to their basic conditions without any intervention
Treatment:
Other: no intervention
allergen immunotherapy group (AIT)
Description:
Participants were grouped according to their basic conditions without any intervention
Treatment:
Other: no intervention
allergic rhinitis group (ARG)
Description:
Participants were grouped according to their basic conditions without any intervention
Treatment:
Other: no intervention

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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