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Title: Indications and Outcomes for Patients With Limited Symptoms Undergoing Endoscopic Sinus Surgery. Author: Rahman AS, Hwang PH, Alapati R, Lin Y, Nayak JV, Patel ZM, Yan CH. Journal: Am J Rhinol Allergy; 2020 Jul; 34(4):502-507. PubMed ID: 32168996. Abstract: BACKGROUND: Previous research have suggested that chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS) patients with lower symptomatic scores, demonstrated by a 22-item Sinonasal Outcome Test (SNOT-22) score <20, may not achieve meaningful quality of life improvement following endoscopic sinus surgery (ESS). However, indications for ESS are continuing to be defined and many low SNOT-22 scoring patients still undergo elective surgery for CRS and other benign sinonasal pathologies. The outcomes for these patients have not been previously studied. OBJECTIVES: We sought to evaluate surgical indications and outcomes for those patients with limited symptoms undergoing ESS. METHODS: We screened 2829 ESS procedures from 2010-2018 to identify patients with a preoperative SNOT-22 score <20. We reviewed disease characteristics, preoperative Lund-Mackay (LM) scores, and pre- and postoperative SNOT-22 scores in patients with at least 3 months' follow-up. RESULTS: Of all surgical ESS patients screened, 114 had low preoperative SNOT-22 scores (4.0%). Indications for these surgeries included CRS (50.0%), odontogenic sinus disease (11.4%), mucocele (10.5%), recurrent acute sinusitis (7.0%), fungal ball (5.3%), and silent sinus syndrome (4.4%). Specifically, among CRS patients, 45.6% had pulmonary comorbidities and/or systemic immunodeficiencies. Moreover, 100% of CRS patients with nasal polyps and 73.1% of CRS without polyps had LM scores >5. Patients with preoperative SNOT-22 scores between 15 and 19 achieved an average 6.5 point reduction (P < .001) postoperatively, whereas those with scores between 10 and 14 had a 5.4 point reduction (P < .001), and preoperative scores <9 resulted in no significant decrease in postoperative symptom scores (P = .98). Overall, there was a 3.3 point SNOT-22 reduction among all patients at 3 months postoperatively (P < .001). CONCLUSION: Patients with limited sinonasal symptoms may benefit from surgical treatment despite asymptomatic clinical presentations. A case-by-case analysis of comorbidities or unique clinical features should inform surgical decision-making for patients with lower SNOT-22 scores.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]