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Comparison of Allergic Rhinitis Treatments on...
Journal article

Comparison of Allergic Rhinitis Treatments on Patient Satisfaction: A MASK‐air and EAACI Methodological Committee Report

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Satisfaction with treatments may affect medication adherence and use patterns, including the use of co-medication. We aimed to compare different medications for allergic rhinitis (AR) on (i) patients' satisfaction and (ii) co-medication use frequency. METHODS: We assessed data from the mHealth app MASK-air. We evaluated days on which users with self-reported AR had used-alone or in co-medication-intranasal corticosteroids (INCS), intranasal antihistamines (INAH), fixed combinations of INAH+INCS, or oral antihistamines (OAH). We built multivariable regression models to compare these different AR medication classes (as well as individual medications) on their (i) treatment satisfaction levels (measured using a specific daily visual analogue scale ['VAS satisfaction']) and (ii) odds of being used in co-medication. RESULTS: We assessed 28,177 days reported by 1691 MASK-air users. For all medication classes, co-medication usage was associated with lower treatment satisfaction. When used in monotherapy, OAH were associated with lower VAS satisfaction than INCS (-1.7 points; 95% CI = -2.7; -0.7) or INAH+INCS (-2.1 points; 95% CI = -3.5; -0.7). INCS displayed higher odds of being used in co-medication than OAH (OR = 1.3; 95% CI = 1.0; 1.6) or INAH+INCS (OR = 1.3; 95% CI = 0.8; 1.8). When comparing individual intranasal medications, fluticasone furoate and fluticasone propionate tended to be more frequently used in co-medication. Among individual OAH, desloratadine and rupatadine were associated with higher satisfaction, while fexofenadine was more frequently used in co-medication. CONCLUSION: Using patient-reported data, we evaluated different medication classes and treatments in terms of satisfaction and co-medication frequency. These results provide key insights into the acceptability of AR treatments and will contribute to future treatment guidelines.

Authors

Sousa‐Pinto B; Vieira RJ; Bognanni A; Martini M; Ordak M; Paoletti G; Gil‐Mata S; Amaral R; Bedbrook A; Bonadonna P

Journal

Allergy, Vol. 80, No. 12, pp. 3319–3330

Publisher

Wiley

Publication Date

December 1, 2025

DOI

10.1111/all.70055

ISSN

0001-5148

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