4.5 Review

Distribution of cocaine-induced midline destructive lesions: systematic review and classification

Journal

EUROPEAN ARCHIVES OF OTO-RHINO-LARYNGOLOGY
Volume 279, Issue 7, Pages 3257-3267

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00405-022-07290-1

Keywords

Cocaine; Cocaine-induced midline destructive lesions; CIMDL; Septal perforation; Addiction; Nasal lesions

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This systematic review investigated the localization and prevalence of cocaine-induced midline destructive lesions and proposed a four-grade classification based on the location of the lesions. The study found that most lesions occurred in the nasal septum, with decreasing prevalence from the upper nasal cavity to the middle nasal cavity, and ultimately extending to neurocranial structures. There was inconsistency in the reporting of nasal deformities, and information on cocaine use duration, frequency, and status was limited. Future prospective studies are needed to validate the classification and explore its relationship with lesion evolution.
Purpose Intranasal cocaine is known to potentially lead to midline destructive lesions. The present systematic review was undertaken to systematically define the localization of cocaine-induced midline destructive lesions and their prevalence and to propose a practical classification of these lesions. Methods A PRISMA-compliant systematic review was performed in multiple databases with criteria designed to include all studies published until March 2021 providing a precise definition of cocaine-induced midline lesions in humans. We selected all original studies except case reports. After duplicate removal, abstract and full-text selection, and quality assessment, we reviewed eligible articles for lesion localization, patients' demographics, exposure to cocaine, and relationship with external nose destruction. Results Among 2593 unique citations, 17 studies were deemed eligible (127 patients). All studies were retrospective case series. The destructive process determined a septal perforation in 99.2% of patients. The distribution prevalence decreased from the inferior third of the sinonasal complex (nasal floor and inferolateral nasal wall, respectively, 59% and 29.9% of patients) to the middle third (middle turbinate and ethmoid, 22.8% of patients), and ultimately to neurocranial structures (7.9% of patients). Nasal deformities were inconsistently reported across reviewed studies. Cocaine use duration, frequency, and status were reported only occasionally. Conclusion Based on the distribution prevalence observed, we propose a four-grade destruction location-based classification. Future prospective studies following the evolution of cocaine-induced lesions are needed to validate our classification, its relationship with lesion evolution, and whether it represents a reliable tool for homogeneous research results reporting.

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