Department of Allergy and Immunology, Kaiser Permanente Los Angeles Medical Center, Los Angeles, California; Department of Medicine, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, California.
Department of Medicine, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, California; Section of Rheumatology and Allergy Medicine Service, Veterans Affairs San Diego Healthcare System, San Diego, California.
Ann Allergy Asthma Immunol. 2021 Jun;126(6):674-680. doi: 10.1016/j.anai.2021.01.011. Epub 2021 Jan 19.
Intranasal ketorolac has been proposed as a diagnostic test for aspirin-exacerbated respiratory disease (AERD) and a faster, safer, and reliable addition to facilitating aspirin (ASA) desensitization.
We conducted the first prospective study to dissect the impact of intranasal ketorolac incorporation during ASA desensitization vs standard oral protocols in concert with evaluating its diagnostic use for AERD.
Patients with AERD were enrolled in a prospective open-label observational study between November 2006 and August 2013. Participants selected either one of the following desensitization protocols: intranasal ketorolac 1 day before oral ASA (group 1, combined) or ketorolac challenge with greater than 2 weeks elapsing until oral ASA (group 2, washout). All patients were on a leukotriene-modifying drug (montelukast) for at least 1 week before the challenge.
A total of 20 patients were enrolled: 13 in group 1 and 7 in group 2. No significant differences were seen for baseline symptom scores or forced expiratory volume in 1 second. Group 1 exhibited significant increases for the threshold dose of ASA (P = .009), the likelihood of having silent ASA desensitization (P = .01), and decreased reaction severity to oral ASA (P = .04). There were no significant differences in reaction forced expiratory volume in 1 second, the incidence of extrapulmonary symptoms, limited nasoocular reactions, rescue treatment requirements, or time to symptom resolution. There was 100% concordance between reactions to intranasal ketorolac and oral ASA for group 2, supporting its use as a diagnostic test for AERD.
Intranasal ketorolac is a useful diagnostic test and adjunct within the combined ketorolac/ASA protocol to achieve effective, efficient, and perhaps safer desensitization to ASA for patients with AERD.
鼻内给予酮咯酸被提议作为阿司匹林加重性呼吸系统疾病(AERD)的诊断性测试,并且是促进阿司匹林(ASA)脱敏的更快、更安全和更可靠的辅助手段。
我们进行了第一项前瞻性研究,以剖析在 ASA 脱敏期间纳入鼻内酮咯酸与联合使用标准口服方案相比对影响,并评估其对 AERD 的诊断用途。
2006 年 11 月至 2013 年 8 月期间,患有 AERD 的患者参加了一项前瞻性开放标签观察性研究。参与者选择以下脱敏方案之一:口服 ASA 前 1 天鼻内给予酮咯酸(第 1 组,联合组)或酮咯酸激发,2 周以上才开始口服 ASA(第 2 组,洗脱组)。所有患者在挑战前至少使用白三烯修饰药物(孟鲁司特)1 周。
共有 20 名患者入组:第 1 组 13 例,第 2 组 7 例。基线症状评分或第 1 秒用力呼气量无显著差异。第 1 组 ASA 阈剂量显著增加(P =.009),发生沉默性 ASA 脱敏的可能性增加(P =.01),口服 ASA 反应严重程度降低(P =.04)。第 2 组患者第 1 秒用力呼气量、肺外症状发生率、有限的鼻-眼反应、需要抢救治疗、症状缓解时间无显著差异。第 2 组患者鼻内酮咯酸和口服 ASA 反应的一致性为 100%,支持其作为 AERD 的诊断性测试。
鼻内酮咯酸是一种有用的诊断性测试,也是联合酮咯酸/ASA 方案的辅助手段,可实现 AERD 患者有效、高效、可能更安全的 ASA 脱敏。