2008
DOI: 10.2500/ajr.2008.22.3115
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Amphotericin B Irrigation for the Treatment of Chronic Rhinosinusitis without Nasal Polyps: A Randomized, Placebo-controlled, Double-blind Study

Abstract: Our results showed that AMB irrigation improved symptoms and endoscopic scores but did not show superiority to saline irrigation alone in patients who have CRSsNP.

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Cited by 73 publications
(61 citation statements)
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“…As no differences in appearance, taste, smell, and osmolarity were allowed, a similar diluent was used in our placebo nasal lavage solution. 2 Although Gerlinger et al suggest that current data on topical antifungal effectiveness or ineffectiveness are too heterogeneous to draw any conclusions, we feel that based on data from one uncontrolled prospective trial 4 and four double-blind, placebo controlled studies 2,[5][6][7] (including our double-blind, placebo-controlled study), 2 we are able to conclude that topical antifungals are ineffective in the treatment of CRS patients with and without nasal polyposis. And, although Gerlinger et al suggest that the double-blind, placebo-controlled trial by Ponikau et al is in support of a positive effect of topical amphotericin B in CRS patients, we question whether modest, nonrelevant, radiological improvements without symptomatic benefit are clinically significant.…”
Section: Letter To the Editormentioning
confidence: 97%
“…As no differences in appearance, taste, smell, and osmolarity were allowed, a similar diluent was used in our placebo nasal lavage solution. 2 Although Gerlinger et al suggest that current data on topical antifungal effectiveness or ineffectiveness are too heterogeneous to draw any conclusions, we feel that based on data from one uncontrolled prospective trial 4 and four double-blind, placebo controlled studies 2,[5][6][7] (including our double-blind, placebo-controlled study), 2 we are able to conclude that topical antifungals are ineffective in the treatment of CRS patients with and without nasal polyposis. And, although Gerlinger et al suggest that the double-blind, placebo-controlled trial by Ponikau et al is in support of a positive effect of topical amphotericin B in CRS patients, we question whether modest, nonrelevant, radiological improvements without symptomatic benefit are clinically significant.…”
Section: Letter To the Editormentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Five trials were pooled for meta-analysis regarding the outcome of disease-specific quality-oflife scores, [35][36][37][38]40 with a total of 143 and 151 patients for the antifungal group and the placebo group, respectively.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…40 Four trials (66.7%) had both adequate sequence generation and allocation concealment as ascertained from the articles or by correspondence. [35][36][37][38] One trial (16.7%) had adequate sequence generation but no information was given regarding the method of allocation concealment and we received no reply from the author. 39 One trial (16.7%) gave no information regarding sequence generation or allocation concealment.…”
Section: Risk Of Bias In Included Studiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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