Sinonasal Quality Of Life In Children After Outfracture Of Inferior Turbinates And Submucous Inferior Turbinoplasty For Chronic Nasal Congestion

Abstract

IMPORTANCE: Chronic nasal congestion often persists in children despite empirical treatment usingintranasal corticosteroids, systemic antihistamines, and/or leukotriene receptor antagonists. Symptoms are often reported even with negative results of skin or blood allergy testing. Inferior turbinoplasty has been effective in adults and children, but outfracture of inferior turbinates in children is rarely reported, as is use of validated quality-of-life measures to quantify improvements after intervention. Effective use of these 2 procedures for treating chronic nasal congestion may reduce the need for medication and improve sinonasal quality of life. OBJECTIVE: To quantify changes in sinonasal quality of life for children after outfracture of inferior turbinates and concomitant submucous microdebrider inferior turbinoplasty for chronic nasal congestion. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: A case series with planned data collection was conducted in an ambulatory pediatric otolaryngology clinic among 43 patients with chronic nasal congestion who underwent surgical intervention between January 1, 2014, and May 31, 2015. EXPOSURES: Microdebrider submucous inferior turbinoplasty (without bony resection) and outfracture of inferior turbinates. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Demographics and medication use before and after the procedure were reviewed. Scores on the Sinus and Nasal Quality of Life Survey (SN-5) and quality-of-life scores were collected at baseline, 4 to 6 weeks after the procedure, and more than 6 months after the procedure. RESULTS: Among the 43 patients (14 girls and 29 boys; mean age, 11.2 years [range, 4.8-17.6 years]), every domain showed significant improvements in scores on the Sinus and Nasal Quality of Life Survey and quality-of-life scores 1 to 2 months after the proecdure: sinus infection (-2.55; 95% CI, 1.85-3.26), nasal obstruction (-3.51; 95% CI, 2.88-4.14), allergy symptoms (-2.14; 95% CI, 1.43-2.86), emotional distress (-2.37; 95% CI, 1.68-3.06), activity limitation (-1.70; 95% CI, 1.14-2.25), and overall quality of life (3.72; 95% CI, 2.95-4.48). At long-term follow-up, improvement was maintained in all categories. Significant improvements in SN-5 and quality-of-life scores correlated with proportional decreased reporting of snoring after the procedure (33 [77%] vs 1 [2%]; absolute reduction, 75%; 95% CI, 62%-88%), as well as nasal congestion (41 [95%] vs 1 [2%]; absolute reduction, 93%; 95% CI, 85%-100%), and rhinorrhea (44 [41%] vs 1 [2%]; absolute reduction, 42%; 95% CI, 27%-57%). The proportion reporting use of intranasal corticosteroids (25 [58%] vs 2 [5%]; absolute reduction, 50%; 95% CI, 39%-71%), antihistamines (27 [63%] vs 1 [2%]; absolute reduction, 61%; 95% CI, 46%-75%), and leukotriene receptor antagonists (13 [30%] vs 0; absolute reduction, 30%; 95% CI, 16%-44%) also decreased. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Concomitant outfracture and submucous microdebrider inferior turbinoplasty improves quality of life in children with chronic nasal congestion and can reduce use of daily medication.

Publication Date

5-1-2017

Publication Title

JAMA Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery

Volume

143

Issue

5

Number of Pages

452-457

Document Type

Article

Personal Identifier

scopus

DOI Link

https://doi.org/10.1001/jamaoto.2016.3889

Socpus ID

85019885269 (Scopus)

Source API URL

https://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopus_id/85019885269

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