Abstract

BackgroundThe diagnosis of chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS) based on clinical presentation alone remains challenging. To improve the accuracy of clinical diagnosis, the Canadian Rhinosinusitis Guidelines recommend the use of specific symptom and endoscopic criteria. Our study objective was to determine whether symptom and endoscopic criteria, as defined by the Canadian Rhinosinusitis Guidelines, accurately predict CT-confirmed CRS diagnosis.MethodsA retrospective cohort study of 126 patients who underwent CT sinuses based on clinical suspicion of possible CRS. The presence of symptom and endoscopic criteria, as defined by the Canadian Rhinosinusitis Guidelines, were compared between patients with and without a CT-confirmed CRS diagnosis using two-tailed Fisher’s exact tests. Positive predictive values and likelihood ratios were determined for each symptom and endoscopic finding.ResultsOverall, 56.3% of patients had a CT-confirmed diagnosis of CRS. With the exception of nasal polyps, none of the symptom or endoscopic criteria had a statistically significant correlation with positive CT sinuses. For symptom criteria, positive predictive values ranged from 52.4% to 63.4%; likelihood ratios ranged from 0.85 to 1.34. For endoscopic criteria, positive predictive values and likelihood ratios were 71.4% and 1.94 (edema); 63.0% and 1.32 (discharge); and 92.9% and 10.1 (nasal polyps). 35.2% of patients with CT-confirmed CRS had normal endoscopic exams.ConclusionThe Canadian Rhinosinusitis Guidelines’ symptom and endoscopic criteria for CRS, with the exception of nasal polyps on endoscopy, do not accurately predict CT-confirmed disease. In addition, a normal endoscopic exam does not rule out CRS.

Highlights

  • The diagnosis of chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS) based on clinical presentation alone remains challenging

  • We identified all CT sinuses imaging studies ordered for evaluation of possible CRS through a tertiary level rhinology clinic between January 2014 and March 2016

  • None of the individual symptoms were strongly predictive of disease (PPV 52.4– 63.4%), nor did they demonstrate a statistically significant difference between groups with and without CRS

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Summary

Introduction

The diagnosis of chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS) based on clinical presentation alone remains challenging. The socioeconomic burden of CRS is profound, costing the US healthcare system over 60 Billion dollars per year [2], and lost productivity costs exceeding 13 Billion per year [4]. It has a significant impact on quality of life, comparable to CHF, angina, COPD, and back pain [1]. Despite multiple revisions to diagnostic criteria over the past 20 years, the symptombased diagnostic criteria still have a specificity of only 2–12%, and a positive predictive value (PPV) of 35–54% [5–7] For this reason, the current international guidelines (International Consensus Statement on Allergy and Rhinology: Rhinosinusitis, 2016) recommend objective confirmation of disease using either nasal endoscopy or CT scan to increase the accuracy of diagnosis [8]

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