Definition of sinonasal and otological exacerbation in patients with primary ciliary dyskinesia: an expert consensus
Definition of sinonasal and otological exacerbation in patients with primary ciliary dyskinesia: an expert consensus
Background: recurrent infections of the nose, sinuses and ears are common problems for people with primary ciliary dyskinesia. While pulmonary exacerbations in primary ciliary dyskinesia are defined, there is no definition for ear-nose-throat exacerbations, a potential outcome for research and clinical trials.
Methods: we set up an expert panel of 24 ear-nose-throat specialists, respiratory physicians, other healthcare professionals and patients to develop consensus definitions of sinonasal and otological exacerbations in children and adults with primary ciliary dyskinesia for research settings. We reviewed the literature and used a modified Delphi approach with four electronic surveys.
Results: definitions for both sinonasal and otological exacerbations are based on a combination of major and minor criteria, requiring three major or two major and at least two minor criteria each. Major criteria for a sinonasal exacerbation are 1) reported acute increase in nasal discharge or change in colour, 2) reported acute pain or sensitivity in the sinus regions and 3) mucopurulent discharge on examination. Minor criteria include reported symptoms, examination signs, doctor's decision to treat and improvement after at least 14 days. Major criteria for the otological exacerbation are 1) reported acute ear pain or sensitivity, 2) reported acute ear discharge, 3) ear discharge on examination and 4) signs of otitis media in otoscopy. Minor criteria are reported acute hearing problems, signs of acute complication, and doctor's decision to treat.
Conclusion: these definitions might offer a useful outcome measure for primary ciliary dyskinesia research in different settings. They should be validated in future studies and trials together with other potential outcomes, to assess their usability.
Goutaki, Myrofora
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Lam, Yin Ting
db005395-0f1e-458c-a692-9c2e9d0a8369
Anagiotos, Andreas
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Armengot, Miguel
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Burgess, Andrea
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Campbell, R.
f782201d-edaa-43d9-a4f8-d0c352546705
Lucas, Jane
5cb3546c-87b2-4e59-af48-402076e25313
Maitre, Bernard
bacd2a40-39d0-4c4e-92a9-de8ec7f7489f
Papon, Jean-Francois
84921568-d178-46d1-8cb2-e5fe22703d9e
Goutaki, Myrofora
60fbeefc-dbb1-429c-b81a-3c35d368db64
Lam, Yin Ting
db005395-0f1e-458c-a692-9c2e9d0a8369
Anagiotos, Andreas
d191ac3c-b9c2-4c17-9530-4461ee2a0210
Armengot, Miguel
834bef4b-a385-47e2-b3ce-8cc2554da203
Burgess, Andrea
5f0c861d-1a20-4afa-b1e2-156c175dcadd
Campbell, R.
f782201d-edaa-43d9-a4f8-d0c352546705
Lucas, Jane
5cb3546c-87b2-4e59-af48-402076e25313
Maitre, Bernard
bacd2a40-39d0-4c4e-92a9-de8ec7f7489f
Papon, Jean-Francois
84921568-d178-46d1-8cb2-e5fe22703d9e
Goutaki, Myrofora, Lam, Yin Ting and Anagiotos, Andreas
,
et al.
(2024)
Definition of sinonasal and otological exacerbation in patients with primary ciliary dyskinesia: an expert consensus.
ERJ Open Research, 10 (6), [00218-2024].
(doi:10.1183/23120541.00218-2024).
Abstract
Background: recurrent infections of the nose, sinuses and ears are common problems for people with primary ciliary dyskinesia. While pulmonary exacerbations in primary ciliary dyskinesia are defined, there is no definition for ear-nose-throat exacerbations, a potential outcome for research and clinical trials.
Methods: we set up an expert panel of 24 ear-nose-throat specialists, respiratory physicians, other healthcare professionals and patients to develop consensus definitions of sinonasal and otological exacerbations in children and adults with primary ciliary dyskinesia for research settings. We reviewed the literature and used a modified Delphi approach with four electronic surveys.
Results: definitions for both sinonasal and otological exacerbations are based on a combination of major and minor criteria, requiring three major or two major and at least two minor criteria each. Major criteria for a sinonasal exacerbation are 1) reported acute increase in nasal discharge or change in colour, 2) reported acute pain or sensitivity in the sinus regions and 3) mucopurulent discharge on examination. Minor criteria include reported symptoms, examination signs, doctor's decision to treat and improvement after at least 14 days. Major criteria for the otological exacerbation are 1) reported acute ear pain or sensitivity, 2) reported acute ear discharge, 3) ear discharge on examination and 4) signs of otitis media in otoscopy. Minor criteria are reported acute hearing problems, signs of acute complication, and doctor's decision to treat.
Conclusion: these definitions might offer a useful outcome measure for primary ciliary dyskinesia research in different settings. They should be validated in future studies and trials together with other potential outcomes, to assess their usability.
Text
ERJ Open Res-2024-Goutaki-00218-2024
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Accepted/In Press date: 18 June 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 16 December 2024
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Local EPrints ID: 500880
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/500880
ISSN: 2312-0541
PURE UUID: 624d9229-f247-4986-9a44-924dbd1ecf4c
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Date deposited: 14 May 2025 16:57
Last modified: 15 May 2025 01:38
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Contributors
Author:
Myrofora Goutaki
Author:
Yin Ting Lam
Author:
Andreas Anagiotos
Author:
Miguel Armengot
Author:
Andrea Burgess
Author:
R. Campbell
Author:
Bernard Maitre
Author:
Jean-Francois Papon
Corporate Author: et al.
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