6 results on '"Sanchez-Gomez S"'
Search Results
2. Endoscopic Extended Sinus Surgery for Patients with Severe Chronic Rhinosinusitis with Nasal Polyps, the Choice of Mucoplasty: A Systematic Review.
- Author
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Martin-Jimenez D, Moreno-Luna R, Cuvillo A, Gonzalez-Garcia J, Maza-Solano J, and Sanchez-Gomez S
- Subjects
- Humans, Quality of Life, Chronic Disease, Rhinitis complications, Rhinitis surgery, Nasal Polyps complications, Nasal Polyps surgery, Nasal Polyps drug therapy, Rhinosinusitis, Sinusitis complications, Sinusitis surgery, Sinusitis drug therapy
- Abstract
Purpose of Review: The advances in the knowledge of the molecular basis of the inflammatory response in chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps (CRSwNP) have led the management of these patients towards personalized and precision medicine. Surgery has been positioned as a suitable alternative in patients who do not achieve control with appropriate medical treatment, but polypoid recurrences remain a constraint. The emergence of new surgical approaches based on patient phenotyping and the poor disease control associated with type 2 inflammatory phenotype makes it necessary to review the role of personalized and precision surgery in managing the disease., Recent Findings: Surgical approaches based on wide resection of bony sinus structures and the treatment of mucosa lining the sinonasal cavity have been analyzed and compared with other techniques and seem to offer more favorable surgical outcomes and improved quality of life (QoL), in addition to lower relapse rates. The innovations with new complementary surgical techniques, such as reboot surgery adding an extended autologous mucosal graft from the nasal floor (mucoplasty), may benefit endoscopic and QoL outcomes in the most severe CRSwNP patients with type 2 phenotype. Using bilateral endonasal mucoplasty as a complementary technique to reboot surgery is a suitable technical choice that has improved short- and medium-term QoL and endoscopic outcomes for patients with severe CRSwNP. These results are likely due to a combination of the extension of reboot and the inherent inflammatory and healing properties of mucoplasty. We propose this technique as a valuable surgical resource, although more robust clinical studies are needed to evaluate its long-term benefits comprehensively., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Omalizumab Treatment in Uncontrolled Asthma and CRSwNP Patients, with Previous Endoscopic Sinus Surgery, to Improve Quality of Life and Endoscopic Outcomes: a Two-Year Real-Life Study.
- Author
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Maza-Solano J, Callejon-Leblic A, Martin-Jimenez D, Moreno-Luna R, Gonzalez-Garcia J, Cuvillo A, and Sanchez-Gomez S
- Subjects
- Humans, Chronic Disease, Quality of Life, Retrospective Studies, Asthma complications, Asthma drug therapy, Nasal Polyps complications, Nasal Polyps drug therapy, Nasal Polyps surgery, Omalizumab therapeutic use, Sinusitis complications, Sinusitis drug therapy, Sinusitis surgery
- Abstract
Purpose of Review: Despite molecular underlying advances, limited and divergent data on monoclonal antibodies (mAb) therapy in chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps (CRSwNP) make further analysis necessary. The objective of this study is to evaluate the effect of omalizumab as an adjunct to endoscopic sinus surgery (ESS) on the treatment of CRSwNP under real-life conditions., Recent Findings: Since the introduction of omalizumab, as the first biologic agent for the treatment of diseases such as severe allergic asthma, different studies have demonstrated an effect of omalizumab on CRSwNP, with significant improvements in sinonasal symptoms and endoscopic scores. The high efficacy derived from mAb therapy and the need for ESS prior to mAb recommended by guidelines, has led to compare both therapeutic alternatives, finding discrepancies in their effect on quality of life (QoL) and complementary tests outcomes. Patients with moderate-to-severe asthma with clinical criteria for omalizumab indication, and coexistent CRSwNP disease, were selected for a non-randomized interventional retrospective study into four treatment subgroups. Measures were analyzed and compared between groups and over time at the baseline, 16 weeks and 1 and 2 years after treatment. Omalizumab treatment in patients with previous ESS exhibited an earlier and more pronounced improvement in QoL, symptoms scale and endoscopic findings (nasal polyp score and the bilateral modified Lund-Kennedy) as early from week 16, which improvement persisted for 2 years. A greater mean improvement of 33.4 ± 6.5 (95% CI: 20.3-46.4; p < 0.001) points in sinonasal outcome test 22 (SNOT-22) was associated with ESS at week 16, against omalizumab effect (17.8 ± 7.6 [95% CI: 2.6-33.0]; p = 0.023). At year 2, an improvement in SNOT-22 of 62.6 ± 8.9 (95% CI: 48.4-84.1; p < 0.001) points was exclusively associated with omalizumab. Clinical evidence of the effect of omalizumab added to ESS treatment is provided in this study in the short- and long-term., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Transcriptional analysis of nasal polyps fibroblasts reveals a new source of pro-inflammatory signaling in CRSwNP.
- Author
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Porras-Gonzalez C, Palacios-Garcia JM, Sanchez-Gomez S, Maza-Solano JM, Alba G, Sanchez-Margalet V, Palomares O, Del Cuvillo A, Cordero-Varela JA, Moreno-Luna R, and Munoz-Bravo JL
- Subjects
- Humans, Chronic Disease, Inflammation pathology, Fibroblasts metabolism, Fibroblasts pathology, Rhinitis pathology, Nasal Polyps pathology, Sinusitis metabolism
- Abstract
Background: Fibroblasts and others mesenchymal cells have recently been identified as critical cells triggering tissue-specific inflammatory responses. Persistent activation of fibroblasts inflammatory program has been suggested as an underlying cause of chronic inflammation in a wide range of tissues and pathologies. Nevertheless, the role of fibroblasts in the emergence of chronic inflammation in the upper airway has not been previously addressed. We aimed to elucidate whether fibroblasts could have a role in the inflammatory response in chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps (CRSwNP)., Methodology: We performed whole-transcriptome microarray in fibroblast cultured from CRSwNP samples and confirmed our results by qRT-PCR. We selected patients without other associated diseases in upper airway. To investigate shifts in transcriptional profile we used fibroblasts from nasal polyps and uncinate mucosae from patient with CRSwNP, and fibroblasts from uncinate mucosae from healthy subjects as controls., Results: This study exposes activation of a pro-inflammatory and pro-fibrotic transcriptional program in nasal polyps and CRSwNP fibroblasts when compared to controls. Our Gene-set Enrichment Analysis (GSEA) pointed to common up-regulation of several pro-inflammatory pathways in patients-derived fibroblasts, along with higher mRNA expression levels of cytokines, growth factors and extracellular matrix components., Conclusions: Our work reveals a potential new source of inflammatory signaling in CRSwNP. Furthermore, our results suggest that deregulated inflammatory signaling in tissue-resident fibroblasts could support a Type-2 inflammatory response. Further investigations will be necessary to demonstrate the functionality of these novel results.
- Published
- 2023
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5. Usefulness of bilateral mucoplasty plus reboot surgery in severe type-2 chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps.
- Author
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Moreno-Luna R, Martin-Jimenez DI, Callejon-Leblic MA, Gonzalez-Garcia J, Maza-Solano JM, Porras-Gonzalez C, Del Cuvillo-Bernal A, and Sanchez-Gomez S
- Subjects
- Chronic Disease, Endoscopy methods, Humans, Prospective Studies, Quality of Life, Treatment Outcome, Nasal Polyps complications, Nasal Polyps diagnosis, Nasal Polyps surgery, Rhinitis complications, Rhinitis diagnosis, Rhinitis surgery, Sinusitis complications, Sinusitis diagnosis, Sinusitis surgery
- Abstract
Background: Although extended endoscopic sinus surgery (ESS) constitutes an alternative approach in patients with Chronic Rhinosinusitis with Nasal Polyps (CRSwNP), the surgical techniques proposed so far do not allow for an optimal control of the disease. This study introduces bilateral mucoplasty as a complementary technique to extended ESS such as reboot surgery, analyzing its benefits in healing and quality of life (QoL)., Methods: Patients diagnosed with severe Type-2 CRSwNP were selected for a prospective cohort study in two surgery groups: reboot surgery plus bilateral mucoplasty versus reboot surgery only. In the first group, an autologous endonasal mucosal graft from the nostril floor was placed bilaterally onto the ethmoidal roof. Endoscopic, radiological and QoL outcomes were compared before and one year after surgery between the two groups using Modified Lund Kennedy (LKM), Meltzer and Lund Mackay (LM) scores, and the Sino-Nasal Outcome Test 22 (SNOT-22)., Results: 64 patients with homogeneous baseline characteristics were included: 17 patients underwent a reboot surgery plus a bilateral mucoplasty and 47 a reboot surgery only. LKM, Meltzer and SNOT-22 scores showed significant differences before and after surgery in both groups, with higher improvement in the mucoplasty group. A greater mean improvement of 20.5 ± 6.4 points in SNOT-22 change was associated with bilateral mucoplasty., Conclusion: Bilateral mucoplasty plus reboot surgery constitutes a useful surgical resource in Type-2 CRSwNP patients, showing improved endoscopic, radiological and QoL outcomes one year after surgery. Further studies are needed to determine their long-term benefits.
- Published
- 2022
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- View/download PDF
6. Free nasal floor mucosal grafting after endoscopic total ethmoidectomy for severe nasal polyposis: a pilot study.
- Author
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Moreno-Luna R, Gonzalez-Garcia J, Maza-Solano JM, Molina-Fernandez E, Pinheiro-Neto CD, Del Cuvillo Bernal A, Langdon C, and Sanchez-Gomez S
- Subjects
- Chronic Disease, Humans, Middle Aged, Pilot Projects, Treatment Outcome, Endoscopy methods, Nasal Polyps complications, Nasal Polyps surgery, Sinusitis etiology, Sinusitis surgery
- Abstract
Background: We report a novel surgical technique based on an endonasal free mucosal graft (mucoplasty) for improving clinical results and local healing in chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps (CRSwNP)., Methods: Patients diagnosed with bilateral CRSwNP scheduled for endoscopic sinus surgery were included. They underwent complete removal of anterior and posterior ethmoid cells, in addition to bilateral type III frontal sinusotomy. An endoscopic mucoplasty was performed in the left nasal cavity, whereas the right nasal cavity served as control. Patients were evaluated before surgery and 6 months after operation, including Sino-Nasal Outcome Test (SNOT-22), Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) for olfaction, endoscopic evaluation using the Modified und-Kennedy (MLK) scoring system and healing evaluation., Results: Ten patients (mean age 53.6 years) were included. A significa t decrease of SNOT-22 score from 57.0 (21.1) to 20.3 (20.6) (P = 0.024) and a non-significa t decrease of VAS for olfaction score from 9.3 (0.5) to 4.6 (3.9) were found. Preoperative mean MLK score was 4.9 (0.7) in the right nostril and 4.8 (1.0) in the left one. After operation, there was a greater decrease of MLK score in the left nostril than in the right (1.9 [1.0] vs. 1.3 [0.8], P = 0.034). Better healing was proved in the nostril with the mucoplasty., Conclusion: Endonasal mucoplasty could be an effective, safe and feasible complementary surgical procedure in the treatment of CRSwNP. The reduced local edema associated with lower amount of secretions may confer a better control in the frontal recess, orbital wall and nasal roof.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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