Unraveling the Power of Topical Inhaled Steroids in Treating Laryngeal Granulomas: A Systematic Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. The Research Question
- P (Population): Patients with airway laryngeal granuloma
- I (Intervention): Inhaled steroids
- C (Comparison): Placebo or other treatments
- O (Outcome): Improvement in airway function
2.2. Search Strategy
- Stage 1: A broad search strategy that aimed to identify potentially relevant studies broadly matching the research question and inclusion criteria regarding topic and population. Studies not published in English or not addressing the treatment efficacy of inhaled steroids for airway laryngeal granuloma were excluded at this stage.
- Stage 2: A refined search strategy that aimed to exclude studies clearly unrelated to the research question. Detailed evaluation of study titles, abstracts, and full texts (when available) determined whether they met inclusion criteria. Duplicate studies were also identified and excluded.
2.3. Study Selection
2.3.1. Inclusion Criteria
- Patients diagnosed with airway granuloma.
- Interventional or observational studies compare inhaled steroids to placebo or other treatments.
- Studies published in English.
- Studies published after 2005.
2.3.2. Exclusion Criteria Were
- Studies that do not report on airway laryngeal granuloma as the primary outcome.
- Studies that only include patients with a different primary diagnosis
- Observational studies
- Non-English language studies
2.4. Data Extraction
2.5. Quality Assessment
3. Results
3.1. Study Selection Process
3.2. The Quality Assessment
3.3. Main Outcomes
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Author and Year | Study Design | Title | Participants | Interventions | Expected Results |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
[23] (Martins et al., 2019) | Retrospective | Treatment of Laryngeal Granulomas | 42 | Inhaled steroids vs. surgical removal | In laryngeal granulomas caused by reflux, treatment with inhaled steroids and proton pump inhibitors proved to be effective, although prolonged. In postintubation and idiopathic granulomas, surgery was the best treatment. |
[19] (Rimoili et al., 2018) | Systematic review | Treatment of post-intubation laryngeal granulomas: systematic review | 85 | Inhaled steroids | There is no evidence of high quality that proves the efficacy of any treatment for laryngeal granulomas resulting from endotracheal intubation |
[28] (Nouraei et al., 2008) | Case control | Results of endoscopic surgery and intralesional steroid therapy for airway compromise due to tracheobronchial Wegener’s granulomatosis | 53 | Inhaled steroids | Steroid therapy and conservative endoluminal surgery is an effective strategy for treating airway compromise due to active tracheal and bronchial WG, obviating the need for airway bypass or stenting. |
[24] (Perkins et al., 2018 | Retrospective | Inhaled Triamcinolone With Proton Pump Inhibitor for Treatment of Vocal Process Granulomas | 67 | Inhaled steroids | The anti-inflammatory action of inhaled triamcinolone combined with anti-reflux proton pump inhibitors successfully treats most vocal process granulomas with low rates of side effects and recurrence. |
[18] (Elshabboury, 2015) | RCT | Steroid Inhalation Versus Surgery in Treatment of Post-Intubation Granuloma | 30 | Inhaled steroids vs. surgery | Advise to manage intubation granuloma of the larynx mainly by inhaled steroid as a first line of treatment. |
[29] (Hollis et al., 2022 | Retrospective | Postoperative Inhaled Steroids Following Glottic Airway Surgery Reduces Granulation Tissue Formation | 150 | Inhaled steroids | Immediate postoperative use of inhaled corticosteroids seems to be a safe and effective method to prevent granulation tissue formation and subsequent surgery in patients following transoral laser airway surgery for glottic stenosis. |
[26] (Teo et al., 2008) | Observational | Recurrent foreign body granuloma with airway obstruction: Is there a role for steroids | 1 | Steroids | Steroids are considered as an adjunct in intractable cases of foreign body granuloma. |
[25] (Yoki et al., 2014) | Retrospective | Topical inhalant steroid (budesonide, Pulmicort nasal) therapy in intubation granuloma | 39 | Inhaled steroids | Inhaled budesonide is effective for treatment of tracheal granulation tissue in patients with tracheostomies after repair of CTS. |
[27] (Karkos et al., 2014) | RCT | Vocal Process Granulomas: A Systematic Review of Treatment | 75 | Several treatment options | There are 6 different treatment options (single or combined) for VPG. Anti-reflux medication is the mainstay treatment and when combined with lifestyle changes and voice therapy results in the lowest recurrence rate. “Bloodless” in-office or in-theater laser techniques appear to have lower recurrence rates when compared to traditional cold steel micro laryngoscopy techniques, especially for recurrences. |
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Alarfaj, A.A. Unraveling the Power of Topical Inhaled Steroids in Treating Laryngeal Granulomas: A Systematic Review. Life 2023, 13, 1984. https://doi.org/10.3390/life13101984
Alarfaj AA. Unraveling the Power of Topical Inhaled Steroids in Treating Laryngeal Granulomas: A Systematic Review. Life. 2023; 13(10):1984. https://doi.org/10.3390/life13101984
Chicago/Turabian StyleAlarfaj, Abdullah A. 2023. "Unraveling the Power of Topical Inhaled Steroids in Treating Laryngeal Granulomas: A Systematic Review" Life 13, no. 10: 1984. https://doi.org/10.3390/life13101984
APA StyleAlarfaj, A. A. (2023). Unraveling the Power of Topical Inhaled Steroids in Treating Laryngeal Granulomas: A Systematic Review. Life, 13(10), 1984. https://doi.org/10.3390/life13101984