Background: Sinonasal disease is prevalent and impacts on quality of life, the Modified SNOT-20 (MSNOT-20) questionnaire aims to provide a complete assessment of rhinitis/rhinosinusitis and its impact. Following a pilot study evaluation, the main project assessed the prevalence of rhinitis/ rhinosinusitis in a community based survey in Farnborough, UK. A sub group was invited for clinical examination and repeatability of MSNOT-20. Further repeatability was carried out through a study of self-referral patients to the ENT department of Services Hospital, Lahore, Pakistan. This study aimed to obtain the current burden of rhinitis/rhinosinusitis in these patients and subsequent disease course. Methods: Following a successful pilot study comparing disease with nondisease, 2000 postal questionnaires were sent to randomly selected adults. A sub group of the sample was invited to the hospital for clinical examination and for the repeatability of MSNOT-20. The Lahore study looked at 200 patients who completed the MSNOT-20 questionnaire on initial presentation and, over the course of 3 consultations, were assessed for disease response to provided therapy by completing MSNOT-20 at each point. For unresponsive cases to conventional therapy, blood tests were used to identify the aetiology of disease. Results: The pilot project showed significant differences (p<0.001) between disease and non-disease. Analysis of responses allowed a discriminating score of >2 (on a 0-5 scale) being an abnormal response. The Farnborough study identified 32% of respondents (79.8% response rate) as disease with significant correlations between disease domain and the 4 other domains (paranasal [sinus and ear], sleep, social and emotional). Analysis of the Lahore study found 25% of the self-referral population suffered from rhinitis /rhinosinusitis, 5% of patients had a form of surgical intervention ranging from antral wash out to endoscopic sinus surgery, 2% had associated pathologies in the form of deflected nasal septum, nasal polyp or antrochoanal polyp. Conclusions: MSNOT-20 questionnaire has identified a high prevalence of nasal and paranasal problems within the community and in self referrals with significant associated co-morbidity. The MSNOT-20 has proven to be a valid, reliable and repeatable disease specific quality of life questionnaire able to evaluate the presence, severity and assessment of response to treatment.
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Sami, A. S., Malik, M., Amjad, M., & Howarth, P. (2013). Rhinitis, sinusitis and ocular disease – 2092. The MSNOT-20 questionnaire: repeatability and disease analysis of rhinitis/rhinosinusitis. World Allergy Organization Journal, 6, P170. https://doi.org/10.1186/1939-4551-6-s1-p170