EBSCO Logo
Connecting you to content on EBSCOhost
Results
Title

Risk factors investigation for different outcomes between unilateral and bilateral chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps patients.

Authors

Wang, Jianwei; Zhang, Yu; Chen, Ying; Xu, Xinjun; Yang, Yujuan; Yin, Jiali; Guo, Jing; Yu, Pengyi; Liu, Zhen; Liu, Huifang; Zuo, Ting; Zhao, Hongfei; Hao, Yan; Zhang, Bei; Song, Xicheng

Abstract

Background: Studies involving chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps (CRSwNP) have mostly focused on bilateral cases, making unilateral CRSwNP inadequately recognized. This study examined the differences in clinical characteristics, outcomes, and risk factors for poor outcomes between unilateral and bilateral CRSwNP to facilitate a better assessment in the two groups. Methods: Demographic information, tissue and blood cells, endoscopic scores, Lund‐Mackay scores, recurrence rates, and disease control conditions were compared between 310 unilateral and 596 bilateral CRSwNP patients. Furthermore, the stepwise regression multivariate Cox proportional hazard models were performed to generate risk factors for poor outcomes in the two groups. Results: Bilateral cases exhibited higher rates of smoking, AR, and asthma comorbidities, along with higher numbers of tissue eosinophils and blood inflammatory cells when compared to unilateral patients. Endoscopic nasal polyp score, total computed tomography (CT) score (with scores for each sinus cavity), and adjusted CT scores were significantly higher in the bilateral group, except for a markedly higher adjusted maxillary score in the unilateral group. Furthermore, significantly higher proportions of bilateral patients experienced nasal polyp recurrence, uncontrolled status, and most disease control‐related symptoms at follow‐up. The primary risk factors for poor outcomes were asthma, tissue eosinophils, and total CT score in the bilateral group and blood basophils in the unilateral group. Conclusions: Bilateral CRSwNP patients experience worse disease severity and outcomes than their unilateral counterparts. Primarily, asthma, tissue eosinophils, and total CT score were risk factors for poor outcomes in bilateral CRSwNP patients, with blood basophils in unilateral cases.

Subjects

NASAL polyps; PROPORTIONAL hazards models; PATIENT experience; DISEASE risk factors; BLOOD cells; EOSINOPHILIA

Publication

Clinical & Translational Allergy, 2024, Vol 14, Issue 9, p1

ISSN

2045-7022

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1002/clt2.12395

EBSCO Connect | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Copyright | Manage my cookies
Journals | Subjects | Sitemap
© 2025 EBSCO Industries, Inc. All rights reserved