Philpott Carl, Erskine Sally, Hopkins Claire, Coombes Emma, Kara Naveed, Sunkareneni Vishnu, Anari Shahram, Salam Mahmoud, Farboud Amir, Clark Allan
Norwich Medical School, University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK.
ENT Department, Guys and St Thomas NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK.
Rhinology. 2016 Jun;54(2):134-40. doi: 10.4193/Rhino15.272.
Chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS) is a common and debilitating disorder. Little is known about the epidemiology of this disease. The aims of the study were to identify differences in socio-economic variables and quality of life between patients with chronic rhinosinusitis and healthy controls, to identify any significant associations between CRS and other medical co-morbidities, psychiatric disease or environmental exposure and to explore the experience of CRS from the perspective of CRS sufferers.
Participants were recruited from ENT clinics from 30 centres across the UK. They completed a study-specific questionnaire considering environmental, medical and socio-economic factors, and SF-36 and SNOT-22 scores. All participants with CRS were diagnosed by a clinician and categorised as having CRS (with polyposis, without polyposis or allergic fungal rhinosinusitis (AFRS)). Controls included family and friends of those attending ENT outpatient clinics and hospital staff who had no diagnosis of nose or sinus problems and had not been admitted to hospital in the previous 12 months.
A total of 1470 study participants (1249 patients and 221 controls) were included in the final analysis. Highly significant differences were seen in generic and disease-specific quality of life scores between CRS sufferers and controls; mean SNOT-22 score 45.0 for CRS compared with 12.1 amongst controls. There were no clear differences in socioeconomic variables including social class, index of multiple deprivation and educational attainment between cases and controls. Common comorbidities with a clear association included respiratory and psychiatric disorders, with a higher frequency of reported upper respiratory tract infections.
CRS is associated with significant impairment in quality of life and with certain medical co-morbidities. In contrast to other common ENT disorders, no socioeconomic differences were found between patients and controls in this study.
慢性鼻-鼻窦炎(CRS)是一种常见且使人衰弱的疾病。对该疾病的流行病学了解甚少。本研究的目的是确定慢性鼻-鼻窦炎患者与健康对照者在社会经济变量和生活质量方面的差异,确定CRS与其他合并症、精神疾病或环境暴露之间的任何显著关联,并从CRS患者的角度探索CRS的患病体验。
从英国30个中心的耳鼻喉科诊所招募参与者。他们完成了一份针对研究的问卷,该问卷考虑了环境、医学和社会经济因素,以及SF-36和SNOT-22评分。所有CRS参与者均由临床医生诊断,并分类为患有CRS(伴有息肉病、不伴有息肉病或变应性真菌性鼻-鼻窦炎(AFRS))。对照组包括耳鼻喉科门诊患者的家人和朋友以及医院工作人员,他们没有鼻或鼻窦问题的诊断,并且在过去12个月内未住院。
最终分析纳入了总共1470名研究参与者(1249名患者和221名对照)。CRS患者与对照者在一般和疾病特异性生活质量评分方面存在高度显著差异;CRS患者的平均SNOT-22评分为45.0,而对照组为12.1。病例组和对照组在社会经济变量(包括社会阶层、多重剥夺指数和教育程度)方面没有明显差异。明确相关的常见合并症包括呼吸系统和精神疾病,报告的上呼吸道感染频率更高。
CRS与生活质量的显著损害以及某些合并症相关。与其他常见的耳鼻喉科疾病不同,本研究中患者与对照者之间未发现社会经济差异。