Consistent trajectories of rhinitis control and treatment in 16,177 weeks: The MASK-air® longitudinal study.
Bernardo Sousa-PintoHolger J SchünemannAna Sá-SousaRafael José VieiraRita AmaralJosep M AntoLudger KlimekWienczyslawa CzarlewskiJoaquim MullolOliver PfaarAnna BedbrookLuisa BrussinoVioleta KvedarieneDésirée E Larenas-LinnemannYoshitaka OkamotoMaria Teresa VenturaIoana AgacheIgnacio J AnsoteguiKarl-Christian BergmannSinthia Bosnic-AnticevichG Walter CanonicaVictoria CardonaPedro Carreiro-MartinsThomas CasaleLorenzo CecchiTomas ChivatoDerek K ChuCemal CingiElísio M CostaÁlvaro Augusto CruzStefano R Del GiaccoPhilippe DevillierPatrik EklundWytske Johanna FokkensBilun GemiciogluTari HaahtelaJuan Carlos IvancevichZhanat IspayevaMarek JutelPiotr KunaIgor KaidashevKhaitov M RHelga KraxnerDaniel LauneBrian LipworthRenaud LouisMichael MakrisRiccardo MontiMario Morais-AlmeidaRalph MösgesMarek NiedoszytkoPapadopoulos G NikolaosVincenzo PatellaNhân Pham-ThiFrederico S RegateiroSietze ReitsmaPhilip W RouadiBoleslaw SamolinskiAziz SheikhMilan SovaAna Todo-BomLuis Taborda-BarataSanna Katriina Toppila-SalmiJoaquin SastreIoanna TsiligianniArunas ValiulisOlivier VandenplasDana WallaceSusan WasermanArzu YorganciogluMihaela ZidarnTorsten ZuberbierJoao A FonsecaJean BousquetPublished in: Allergy (2022)
We identified 16 patterns of weekly rhinitis control. Co-medication and medication change schemes were common in uncontrolled weeks, reinforcing the hypothesis that patients treat themselves according to their symptoms.