Impact of nasal congestion on intranasal rescue medication absorption and efficacy: A systematic review.

IF 2.2 3区 医学 Q2 ALLERGY
Michael Blaiss, Dana Wallace, Joseph K Han, Karen Rance
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Abstract

Background: It is critical for rescue medications to have rapid absorption and onset of action. Although intranasal formulations of rescue medications have advantages over other forms of administration, the impact of nasal congestion on drug absorption has been questioned. Objective: We aimed to determine if nasal congestion impacts the absorption and efficacy of intranasal rescue medications. Methods: A rescue medication is used as needed for the immediate treatment of an episodic medical event that requires urgent intervention. Systematic searches for 15 pre-identified intranasal rescue medications were conducted in PubMED/MEDLINE up to July 2, 2024. Eligible studies were controlled human studies that compared the absorption or efficacy of an identical dose of intranasal rescue medication administered with and without the presence of nasal congestion that was induced by allergen challenge or that was associated with a medical condition (e.g., allergic rhinitis). Results: The searches identified 160 articles; six studies, all open-label, were eligible for final inclusion. Two intranasal epinephrine studies showed increased maximum plasma concentrations after allergen-induced congestion; one of these epinephrine studies also showed a faster time to maximum plasma concentration. Three additional studies that evaluated epinephrine, glucagon, and fentanyl found no effect of congestion on absorption. In the sixth study, congestion had no effect on zolmitriptan efficacy. Conclusion: Available evidence indicates no negative impact of nasal congestion on the absorption of intranasal rescue medications. Congestion may actually increase absorption of some intranasal epinephrine formulations. The impact of congestion on intranasal medication absorption is likely dependent on each drug's properties, mode of action, and formulation.

鼻塞对鼻内抢救药物吸收和疗效影响的系统综述。
背景:抢救药物的快速吸收和起效至关重要。尽管救援药物的鼻内配方比其他形式的给药有优势,但鼻塞对药物吸收的影响一直受到质疑。目的:探讨鼻塞是否会影响鼻内抢救药物的吸收和疗效。方法:在需要紧急干预的偶发性医疗事件的即时治疗中,根据需要使用抢救药物。截至2024年7月2日,在PubMED/MEDLINE中对15种预先识别的鼻内抢救药物进行了系统检索。符合条件的研究是对照人体研究,比较了在有和没有由过敏原攻击引起的鼻塞或与医学状况(如过敏性鼻炎)相关的鼻塞的情况下使用相同剂量的鼻内救援药物的吸收或疗效。结果:检索确定了160篇文章;6项研究均为开放标签,符合最终纳入的条件。两项鼻内肾上腺素研究显示过敏原引起的充血后最大血浆浓度增加;其中一项肾上腺素研究也显示达到最大血浆浓度的时间更快。另外三项评估肾上腺素、胰高血糖素和芬太尼的研究发现充血对吸收没有影响。在第六项研究中,充血对唑米曲坦的疗效没有影响。结论:现有证据表明鼻塞对鼻内抢救药物的吸收无负面影响。鼻塞实际上可能会增加某些鼻内肾上腺素制剂的吸收。鼻塞对鼻内药物吸收的影响可能取决于每种药物的性质、作用方式和配方。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.70
自引率
35.70%
发文量
106
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Allergy & Asthma Proceedings is a peer reviewed publication dedicated to distributing timely scientific research regarding advancements in the knowledge and practice of allergy, asthma and immunology. Its primary readership consists of allergists and pulmonologists. The goal of the Proceedings is to publish articles with a predominantly clinical focus which directly impact quality of care for patients with allergic disease and asthma. Featured topics include asthma, rhinitis, sinusitis, food allergies, allergic skin diseases, diagnostic techniques, allergens, and treatment modalities. Published material includes peer-reviewed original research, clinical trials and review articles.
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