section name header

Evidence summaries

Antifungal Therapy for the Symptomatic Treatment of Chronic Rhinosinusitis

Antifungal therapy appears not to be effective in the symptomatic treatment of chronic rhinosinusitis. Level of evidence: "B"

Summary

A Cochrane review [Abstract] 1 included 6 RCTs with 380 participants. The patients had chronic rhinosinusitis. Five studies investigated topical and one study systemic antifungals, amphotericin B in five trials and terbinafine in one trial. Pooled meta-analysis showed no statistically significant benefit of topical or systemic antifungals over placebo for any outcome score for symptoms, disease-specific quality of life, nasal endoscopy or radiographic findings and primary patient-reported outcome measure. Symptom scores in fact statistically favoured the placebo group. Adverse event reporting was statistically significantly higher in the antifungal group.

Comment: The quality of the evidence is downgraded by inconsistency (heterogeneity in patients, interventions and outcomes).

Clinical comments

Note

Date of latest search:

References

  • Sacks PL, Harvey RJ, Rimmer J et al. Topical and systemic antifungal therapy for the symptomatic treatment of chronic rhinosinusitis. Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2011;(8):CD008263. [PubMed]

Primary/Secondary Keywords