Management of adult asthma and chronic rhinitis as one airway disease.
Angelica I TiotiuPlamena NovakovaGuillermo Guidos FogelbachJaime Correia de SousaMatteo BoniniPublished in: Expert review of respiratory medicine (2021)
Introduction: Chronic rhinitis is defined as nasal inflammation with the presence of minimum two symptoms such as nasal obstruction, rhinorrhea, sneezing and/or itching one hour daily for a minimum of 12 weeks/year. According their etiology, four groups of rhinitis are described: allergic, infectious, non-allergic non-infectious and mixed.Chronic rhinitis is frequently associated with asthma, shares similar mechanisms of the pathogenesis and has a negative impact of its outcomes sustaining the concept of unified airways disease.Areas covered: The present review summarizes the complex relationship between chronic rhinitis and asthma on the basis of recent epidemiological data, clinical characteristics, diagnosis and therapeutic management. All four groups are discussed with the impact of their specific treatment on asthma outcomes. Some medications are common for chronic rhinitis and asthma while others are more specific but able to treat the associated comorbidity.Expert opinion: The systematic assessment of chronic rhinitis in patients with asthma and its specific treatment improves both disease outcomes. Conversely, several therapies of asthma demonstrated beneficial effects on chronic rhinitis. Treating both diseases at the same time by only one medication is an interesting option to explore in the future in order to limit drugs administration, related costs and side effects.
Keyphrases
- chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
- lung function
- allergic rhinitis
- cystic fibrosis
- drug induced
- type diabetes
- oxidative stress
- emergency department
- adipose tissue
- depressive symptoms
- physical activity
- weight loss
- artificial intelligence
- combination therapy
- preterm birth
- electronic health record
- replacement therapy