Disclaimer
We’re actively expanding Guideline Genius to cover the full UKMLA content map. You may notice some conditions not uploaded yet, or articles that only include diagnosis and management for now. For updates, follow us on Instagram @guidelinegenius.
We openly welcome any feedback or suggestions through the anonymous feedback box at the bottom of every article and we’ll do our best to respond promptly.

Thank you for your support.
The Guideline Genius Team

Total Live Articles: 312

Allergic Rhinitis

NICE CKS Allergic rhinitis. Last revised Jan 2024.

Background

Definition

IgE-mediated inflammatory disorder of the nose that occurs when the nasal mucosa becomes exposed and sensitised to allergens.

Classification:

  • Seasonal rhinitis (hay fever) – symptoms occur at the same time each year in response to a seasonal allergen
    • Most typically occurs in the summer but also depends on the pollen

 

  • Perennial rhinitis – symptoms occur throughout the year

Causes

Common environmental triggers:

  • House dust mites 
  • Grass, tree, and weed pollens
  • Moulds
  • Cat and dog hair

Clinical Features

Typical features:

  • Classic bilateral symptoms: sneezing, nasal itching, rhinorrhoea, nasal congestion
  • Postnasal drip
  • Associated eye symptoms (e.g. bilateral itching, redness, tearing)

Other suggestive features:

  • Personal / family history of atopy (asthma / eczema / allergic rhinitis)
  • Symptoms occur following exposure to a known causative allergen
    • Tree pollens — intermittent or chronic symptoms occur from early to late spring.
    • Grass pollens — intermittent or chronic symptoms occur from late spring to early summer.
    • Weed pollens — intermittent or chronic symptoms may occur from early spring to early autumn.
    • House dust mites — symptoms are worse on waking and are present all year-round, but may peak in autumn and spring.
    • Animal dander — symptoms follow exposure to animal dander, and may be all year-round or occasional, depending on exposure.
    • Occupational — intermittent or chronic symptoms tend to improve when the person is away from work, such as weekends and holidays.

Guidelines

Referral Criteria

Consider referral if:

  • Unilateral red-flag symptoms (blood-stained nasal discharge / recurrent epistaxis / nasal pain) → 2 week wait referral to ENT
  • Structural abnormality / predominant nasal obstruction that makes intranasal drug treatment difficult
  • Persistent symptoms despite optimal management in primary care
  • Uncertain diagnosis

Investigation and Diagnosis

Clinical diagnosis based on a combination of:

  • History
  • Clinical exam 
  • Response to 1st line treatment

Specialist may perform allergy testing but not required for diagnosis:

  • Skin prick testing
  • RAST (measure level of serum-specific IgE to allergens)

Management

General Advice / Conservative Management 

  • Allergic avoidance technique    
  • Consider nasal irrigation with saline solution 

Pharmacological management 

1st Line Therapy

  • Intranasal corticosteroids (e.g. mometasone, fluticasone),
    • Most effective treatment
    • But may take several hours to days to become effective

AND/OR

  • Intranasal antihistamine / oral non-sedating antihistamines
    • Fastest onset of action (within minutes)
    • But less effective than intranasal corticosteroids

Additional treatment:

  • Presence of eye symptoms → antihistamine eye drops / chromone eye drops (sodium cromoglycate, nedocromil)

 
 

The most effective 1st line regimen is intranasal corticosteroid + intranasal antihistamine

Other information:

  • Intranasal corticosteroid + oral antihistamine is no more effective than intranasal corticosteroid on its own
  • Intranasal corticosteroid + intranasal antihistamine is more effective than intranasal corticosteroid on its own

2nd Line Therapy

If 1st line options are ineffective → consider adding:

  • Intranasal anticholinergic (e.g. ipratropium bromide)
  • Intranasal decongestant (e.g. xylometazoline) for up to 5-7 days – especially if congestion is a problem

Also consider

  • Changing 'as needed' oral antihistamine into regular oral antihistamine.
  • Short course of oral corticosteroid for 5-10 days if there are severe uncontrolled symptoms that are affecting quality of life.

References

Original Guideline

Share Your Feedback Below

UK medical guidelines made easy. From guidelines to genius in minutes!

Quick Links

Cookie Policy

Social Media

© 2026 GUIDELINE GENIUS LTD