Background and objectives: The Allergic Rhinitis and its Impact on Asthma (ARIA) guidelines classify rhinitis as "intermittent" or "persistent" and "mild" or "moderate-severe". To assess ARIA classes in a real-world study in terms of phenotypic differences and their association with asthma.
Methods: We performed a cross-sectional real-world study based on users of the MASK-air® app who reported data for at least 3 different months. We assessed the frequency of users according to the ARIA classes and compared these classes in terms of rhinitis symptoms, use of comedication, frequency of comorbid asthma, and the association between comorbid asthma and rhinitis control.
The maximum values on the visual analog scale (VAS) for rhinitis symptoms and the combined symptom medication score were lower in patients with mild rhinitis than in those with moderate-severe rhinitis (irrespective of whether they had persistent or intermittent rhinitis). In most ARIA classes, VAS nose and VAS eye and rhinitis comedication were more frequent in patients with rhinitis+asthma than in those with rhinitis alone.
Conclusion: This study suggests that the presence of asthma is more closely related to persistence of rhinitis than to severity and that the presence of comorbid asthma may be associated with poorer control of rhinitis across the different ARIA classes.
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