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Olfactory training using nasal inserts is more effective due to increased adherence

Winter, Anja L. ; Henecke, Sofie ; Thunell, Evelina ; Swartz, Mattias ; Martinsen, Joakim ; Johnson, Pernilla Sahlstrand LU and Lundström, Johan N. (2025) In Rhinology 63(4). p.477-485
Abstract

Background: The recommended treatment for hyposmia (a clinically reduced sense of smell) is olfactory training using odor containers that the patients smell twice a day for several weeks. Adherence to the olfactory training regimen is, however, generally low. We aimed to investigate if a new form of odor delivery, using scented nasal inserts, could enhance adherence to olfactory training by allowing participants to be mobile during the training and thereby lower the perceived intrusion on everyday life. Methods: Using a randomized controlled parallel-group design, individuals (N = 116) with hyposmia underwent 8 weeks of olfactory training. One group was assigned olfactory training using scented nasal inserts (nasal devices that retain... (More)

Background: The recommended treatment for hyposmia (a clinically reduced sense of smell) is olfactory training using odor containers that the patients smell twice a day for several weeks. Adherence to the olfactory training regimen is, however, generally low. We aimed to investigate if a new form of odor delivery, using scented nasal inserts, could enhance adherence to olfactory training by allowing participants to be mobile during the training and thereby lower the perceived intrusion on everyday life. Methods: Using a randomized controlled parallel-group design, individuals (N = 116) with hyposmia underwent 8 weeks of olfactory training. One group was assigned olfactory training using scented nasal inserts (nasal devices that retain nasal patency) while the other group was assigned the standard care regimen currently recommended by the Swedish healthcare system. We assessed objective and subjective olfactory ability before and after olfactory training as well as adherence to training. Results: Both groups significantly improved both their objective and subjective olfactory abilities, and training with nasal inserts produced similar improvement as standard care in overall treatment outcome. However, there was a significantly greater increase in discrimination performance and lower dropout rate (6.7%) in the nasal insert compared to the standard care group (23.2%). Critically, after exclusion of the drop-out participants, the nasal insert group still showed significantly higher adherence to the training regimen. Conclusions: Olfactory training with nasal inserts could serve as a more effective form of treatment for hyposmia due to patients' improved adherence to protocol and increased tendency to finish their treatment regimen.

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author
; ; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
hyposmia, olfactory disorder, olfactory training, smell, treatment adherence
in
Rhinology
volume
63
issue
4
pages
9 pages
publisher
University Hospital Utrecht
external identifiers
  • scopus:105012776941
  • pmid:40278843
ISSN
0300-0729
DOI
10.4193/Rhin24.369
language
English
LU publication?
yes
additional info
Publisher Copyright: © 2025, International Rhinologic Society. All rights reserved.
id
eaa9796f-aa37-4854-a447-cd09e82a7541
date added to LUP
2026-01-22 16:43:17
date last changed
2026-01-23 09:20:41
@article{eaa9796f-aa37-4854-a447-cd09e82a7541,
  abstract     = {{<p>Background: The recommended treatment for hyposmia (a clinically reduced sense of smell) is olfactory training using odor containers that the patients smell twice a day for several weeks. Adherence to the olfactory training regimen is, however, generally low. We aimed to investigate if a new form of odor delivery, using scented nasal inserts, could enhance adherence to olfactory training by allowing participants to be mobile during the training and thereby lower the perceived intrusion on everyday life. Methods: Using a randomized controlled parallel-group design, individuals (N = 116) with hyposmia underwent 8 weeks of olfactory training. One group was assigned olfactory training using scented nasal inserts (nasal devices that retain nasal patency) while the other group was assigned the standard care regimen currently recommended by the Swedish healthcare system. We assessed objective and subjective olfactory ability before and after olfactory training as well as adherence to training. Results: Both groups significantly improved both their objective and subjective olfactory abilities, and training with nasal inserts produced similar improvement as standard care in overall treatment outcome. However, there was a significantly greater increase in discrimination performance and lower dropout rate (6.7%) in the nasal insert compared to the standard care group (23.2%). Critically, after exclusion of the drop-out participants, the nasal insert group still showed significantly higher adherence to the training regimen. Conclusions: Olfactory training with nasal inserts could serve as a more effective form of treatment for hyposmia due to patients' improved adherence to protocol and increased tendency to finish their treatment regimen.</p>}},
  author       = {{Winter, Anja L. and Henecke, Sofie and Thunell, Evelina and Swartz, Mattias and Martinsen, Joakim and Johnson, Pernilla Sahlstrand and Lundström, Johan N.}},
  issn         = {{0300-0729}},
  keywords     = {{hyposmia; olfactory disorder; olfactory training; smell; treatment adherence}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{4}},
  pages        = {{477--485}},
  publisher    = {{University Hospital Utrecht}},
  series       = {{Rhinology}},
  title        = {{Olfactory training using nasal inserts is more effective due to increased adherence}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.4193/Rhin24.369}},
  doi          = {{10.4193/Rhin24.369}},
  volume       = {{63}},
  year         = {{2025}},
}