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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2024 Jan 1.
Published in final edited form as: Int Forum Allergy Rhinol. 2023 Mar 30;13(7):1061–1482. doi: 10.1002/alr.23079

TABLE VII.G. 1.

Allergic rhinitis and OSA

Study Year LOE Study design Study groups Clinical endpoint Conclusions
Young et al.893 1997 1b Prospective population-based cohort study Population-based sample of individuals (n = 911, response rate 50%) enrolled in Wisconsin Sleep Cohort Study Relationship between nasal obstruction and sleep-disordered breathing assessed via polysomnography, rhinometry, and questionnaires Participants with nighttime symptoms of rhinitis (5+ nights/month) were significantly more likely to report habitual snoring (3–7 nights/week), chronic excessive daytime sleepiness, or nonrestorative sleep than those who rarely had symptoms (p < 0.0001). Those with nasal congestion due to allergy were 1.8× more likely to have moderate to severe sleep-disordered breathing.
Craig et al.891 2005 1a Pooled data from three double-blind crossover RCT 69 patients with allergic rhinitis without OSA Effect of intranasal corticosteroids in patients with perennial rhinitis on reduction of congestion and daytime somnolence Pooled data of budesonide, flunisolide, and fluticasone demonstrated significantly decreased nasal congestion and sleepiness in treated patients. A correlation between reduction in nasal congestion and an improvement in sleep (p < 0.01) and daytime somnolence (p = 0.01) was demonstrated.
Stuck et al.892 2004 1b Prospective, cohort study 25 patients with seasonal allergic rhinitis and 25 healthy volunteers assessed with questionnaires (ESS, SF-36) and polysomnography performed before and during pollen season Effect of seasonal allergic rhinitis on subjective and objective sleep patterns Seasonal allergic rhinitis leads to increased daytime sleepiness (p = 0.006) and quality of life impairment (p < 0.0001).
Santos et al.896 2008 1b Double blind crossover RCT 31 patients with persistent allergic rhinitis and sleep disturbances treated with montelukast or placebo Effect of rhinitis therapy on patient-reported sleep quality and symptoms of daytime sleepiness Montelukast treatment demonstrated significant improvement in reported daytime somnolence (p = 0.0089) and daytime fatigue (p = 0.0087).
Golden et al.897 2010 1b Double blind crossover RCT 24 patients with perennial AR received azelastine vs. saline Effect of topical nasal antihistamines on symptoms of rhinitis, sleep, and daytime somnolence Azelastine reduced rhinorrhea (p = 0.03) and improved subjective sleep quality (p = 0.04) but did not reduce daytime somnolence.
Lavigne et al.894 2013 2b Prospective cohort study 21 patients with OSA and allergic rhinitis and 34 patients with OSA without allergic rhinitis Effect of corticosteroid treatment on disease severity with sleep studies and biopsies obtained from the inferior turbinate, nasopharynx, and uvula Improved O2 nadir, supine AHI, and daytime somnolence in AR group (p = 0.05).
Kiely et al.895 2004 1b RCT OSA with AHI > 10 (n = 13) vs. patients without OSA. Intervention: fluticasone spray for 4 weeks AHI, ESS, snoring Reduction in AHI in patients with OSA and AR compared to placebo (23.3 vs. 30.3). Most patients continued to have significant OSA.