Trial of Directed High-dose Nasal Steroids on Residual Smell Loss in Sinus Patients After Sinus Surgery
Olfaction Disorders, Sinusitis, Paranasal Sinus Diseases
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Olfaction Disorders
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Patients who are otherwise healthy undergoing surgery for treatment of chronic rhinosinusitis will be evaluated for olfactory dysfunction, and if present, will be recruited for study participation. The subjects will be included without regard to their gender, race or ethnicity. Subjects will be identified from patients in the clinical practices of the Department of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery at the University of North Carolina. Only adult patients greater than 18 years old and less than 85 will be approached for this study, as patient treatment algorithms outside this range tend to vary with greater frequency. Due to limited resources, only patients fluent in English will be included, thus minimizing confounding variables and hurdles to patient communication, as some clinics do not have interpreting services. Also, most of the quality of life surveys and olfactory testing do not have non English versions. Only patients with health insurance will be included in the study in order to ensure all participants have access to the study drug.
Exclusion Criteria:
- If the patient is a premenopausal woman, she will be asked if she is pregnant or breastfeeding. If she is either of these, she will be excluded from the study. All remaining women will receive a urine pregnancy test. If this urine pregnancy test is positive, the patient will be excluded from the study. Thus, for premenopausal female patients, a negative urine pregnancy test is necessary for inclusion in the study because of the need for repeat CTs and the possible systemic manifestations due to steroid irrigation. Further exclusion criteria will include the following: hypersensitivity to cortisol, history of pituitary disease, and allergic disease with subsequent anaphylaxis or breathing difficulties. Additionally, patients with a history of immunodeficiency, autoimmune disease, cystic fibrosis, or previous sinus surgery will be excluded as these co-morbidities might cloud the relationship between the treatment and the outcome.
Sites / Locations
- UNC Chapel Hill Department of Otolaryngology/Head and Neck Surgery
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
No Intervention
Experimental
Observation
Treatment
These subjects did not have improved sense of smell after surgery and were randomized to this observation group or treatment group. These patients will be observed post-operatively but will not receive the trial medication.
These subjects did not have improved sense of smell after surgery and were randomized to this treatment group or the observation. These patients will be observed post-operatively and will receive a 3-month course of topical nasal steroids(budesonide respules). Drug: Budesonide Respules Other Names: Pulmicort respules Subjects irrigate their noses with budesonide respules. They will use one respule per nostril twice daily for three months.