#317 Antihistamines for allergic rhinosinusitis: ‘Achoo’sing the right treatment
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- Results statistically significant unless otherwise noted.
- Antihistamines versus placebo:
- Systematic review [7 randomized controlled trials (RCTs), 639 patients] of antihistamines versus placebo over 2-12 weeks.1
- Patient-rated nasal obstruction score (scale 0-3, higher worse), baseline=1.65: Placebo improved symptoms 16% and antihistamines 48%.
- Systematic review (5 RCTs, 3329 patients) of bilastine (newer antihistamine) versus placebo over 1-12 weeks.2
- Total symptom score effect size=0.28, similar to improving symptoms 10-16% over placebo.3
- Other systematic reviews found simiar.4-6
- Systematic review [7 randomized controlled trials (RCTs), 639 patients] of antihistamines versus placebo over 2-12 weeks.1
- Antihistamines versus antihistamines:
- Systematic reviews showed no statistical or clinical differences in Total or Nasal Symptom Scores between antihistamines.2,7
- Antihistamines and other agents:
- Two systematic reviews (5-16 RCTs, 990-2267 patients) compare intranasal corticosteroids to antihistamines over 2-8 weeks.8,9 Total nasal symptom scores improved more with intranasal corticosteroids (51%) versus antihistamines (31%).
- Proportion attaining moderate control or better10 was higher with intranasal steroids (78%) versus antihistamines (58%), number needed to treat=5.
- Systematic review (13 RCTs, 5066 patients) of antihistamines plus intranasal corticosteroids versus intranasal corticosteroids alone over 2-6 weeks.11
- Antihistamine did not add clinically meaningful benefit.
- Other systematic reviews found similar.12-13
- Two systematic reviews (9-14 mixed-design studies, 4458-5781 patients) of antihistamines versus leukotriene receptor antagonist over 1-12 weeks: No clinically meaningful differences.14,15
- Two systematic reviews (5-16 RCTs, 990-2267 patients) compare intranasal corticosteroids to antihistamines over 2-8 weeks.8,9 Total nasal symptom scores improved more with intranasal corticosteroids (51%) versus antihistamines (31%).
- Limitations: Too many to list but include per protocol analysis, incorrect meta-analysis techniques, negative studies not published, and scales defined inconsistently.1,7,11,12,15
- Most antihistamines and many intranasal corticosteroids are available over-the-counter.
- Adverse event data is infrequently reported, inconsistent, and pooled statistics are generally not clinically interpretable.16 Versus Placebo:
- Diphenhydramine mild/moderately more sedating (effect size=0.36).
- Second-generation antihistamines slightly more sedating (effect size=0.14).16
- Some antihistamines may have less sedation: Fexofenadine versus other second-generation (statistic uninterpretable)17 or bilastine (3%) versus cetirizine (7%).2
What is the recommended duration of Tx for intranasal corticosteroids?