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Lack of Efficacy of a Decongestant-Antihistamine Combination for Otitis Media with Effusion (Secretory Otitis Media) in Children — Results of a Double-Blind, Randomized Trial

List of authors.
  • Erdem I. Cantekin, Ph.D.,
  • Ellen M. Mandel, M.D.,
  • Charles D. Bluestone, M.D.,
  • Howard E. Rockette, Ph.D.,
  • Jack L. Paradise, M.D.,
  • Sylvan E. Stool, M.D.,
  • Thomas J. Fria, Ph.D.,
  • and Kenneth D. Rogers, M.D.

Abstract

In a double-blind, randomized trial of 553 infants and children who had otitis media with effusion ("secretory" otitis media), we compared the efficacy of a four-week course of an oral decongestant-antihistamine combination (pseudoephedrine hydrochloride, 4 mg per kilogram of body weight per day, and chlorpheniramine maleate, 0.35 mg per kilogram per day) with that of placebo. Among patients with initially unilateral disease, resolution of middle-ear effusion occurred at four weeks in 38 per cent of those treated with placebo and 34 per cent of those treated with drug (P = 0.74). Among patients with initially bilateral disease the corresponding proportions were 19 and 21 per cent, respectively (P = 0.67). Side effects were reported more often among drug-treated than placebo-treated patients. Decongestant-antihistamine combinations do not appear to be indicated for the treatment of otitis media with effusion in infants and children. (N Engl J Med. 1983; 308:297–301.)

Funding and Disclosures

Supported through a contract (NO1-NS-8–2384) with the National Institute of Neurological and Communicative Disorders and Stroke. The Otitis Media Research Center is supported by a grant (NS-16337) from the National Institutes of Health.

Presented in part at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Otolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery, New Orleans, October 1982.

We are indebted to the following colleagues for their assistance: Sandra K. Arjona, B.A., Quinter Beery, Ph.D., Carol Black, M.S., Jim C. Crane, R.Ph., Alice Elder, Mary Ann Fagan, R.N., R. Michael Feldman, Ph.D., Philip Fireman, M.D., Mitsuhisa Fujioka, M.D., Sakineh N. Ghorbanian, M.D., Kenneth M. Grundfast, M.D., James Harper, B.A., Mary Lynn Hujo, R.N., Ha-Kyung C. Kim, Ph.D., Annette Lucente, David Magner, Richard Michaels, M.D., Cheryl Palfrey, M.S., Lillian Rebholz, Robert Schwarzbach, Norma Sigal, Suzanne Stewart, B.A., Floyd H. Taylor, Sc.D., and Christine Wright, R.N.

Author Affiliations

From the Otitis Media Research Center, the Departments of Otolaryngology and Pediatrics, Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh; the Departments of Otolaryngology, Pediatrics, and Community Medicine, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine; and the Department of Biostatistics, University of Pittsburgh School of Public Health. Address reprint requests to Dr. Cantekin at the Department of Otolaryngology, Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh, 125 DeSoto St., Pittsburgh, PA 15213.