Professor Alyn Morice A.H.Morice@hull.ac.uk
Foundation Chair and Professor of Respiratory Medicine
European respiratory society guidelines on the diagnosis and treatment of chronic cough in adults and children
Morice, Alyn H.; Millqvist, Eva; Bieksiene, Kristina; Birring, Surinder S.; Dicpinigaitis, Peter; Ribas, Christian Domingo; Boon, Michele Hilton; Kantar, Ahmad; Lai, Kefang; McGarvey, Lorcan; Rigau, David; Satia, Imran; Smith, Jacky; Song, Woo Jung; Tonia, Thomy; van den Berg, Jan W.K.; van Manen, Mirjam J.G.; Zacharasiewicz, Angela
Authors
Eva Millqvist
Kristina Bieksiene
Surinder S. Birring
Peter Dicpinigaitis
Christian Domingo Ribas
Michele Hilton Boon
Ahmad Kantar
Kefang Lai
Lorcan McGarvey
David Rigau
Imran Satia
Jacky Smith
Woo Jung Song
Thomy Tonia
Jan W.K. van den Berg
Mirjam J.G. van Manen
Angela Zacharasiewicz
Abstract
These guidelines incorporate the recent advances in chronic cough pathophysiology, diagnosis and treatment. The concept of cough hypersensitivity has allowed an umbrella term that explains the exquisite sensitivity of patients to external stimuli such a cold air, perfumes, smoke and bleach. Thus, adults with chronic cough now have a firm physical explanation for their symptoms based on vagal afferent hypersensitivity. Different treatable traits exist with cough variant asthma (CVA)/eosinophilic bronchitis responding to anti-inflammatory treatment and non-acid reflux being treated with promotility agents rather the anti-acid drugs. An alternative antitussive strategy is to reduce hypersensitivity by neuromodulation. Low-dose morphine is highly effective in a subset of patients with cough resistant to other treatments. Gabapentin and pregabalin are also advocated, but in clinical experience they are limited by adverse events. Perhaps the most promising future developments in pharmacotherapy are drugs which tackle neuronal hypersensitivity by blocking excitability of afferent nerves by inhibiting targets such as the ATP receptor (P2X3). Finally, cough suppression therapy when performed by competent practitioners can be highly effective. Children are not small adults and a pursuit of an underlying cause for cough is advocated. Thus, in toddlers, inhalation of a foreign body is common. Persistent bacterial bronchitis is a common and previously unrecognised cause of wet cough in children. Antibiotics (drug, dose and duration need to be determined) can be curative. A paediatric-specific algorithm should be used.
Citation
Morice, A. H., Millqvist, E., Bieksiene, K., Birring, S. S., Dicpinigaitis, P., Ribas, C. D., …Zacharasiewicz, A. (2021). European respiratory society guidelines on the diagnosis and treatment of chronic cough in adults and children. Pulmonologiya, 31(4), 418-438. https://doi.org/10.18093/0869-0189-2021-31-4-418-438
Journal Article Type | Review |
---|---|
Acceptance Date | May 5, 2021 |
Publication Date | 2021 |
Deposit Date | May 12, 2022 |
Journal | Pulmonologiya |
Print ISSN | 0869-0189 |
Peer Reviewed | Peer Reviewed |
Volume | 31 |
Issue | 4 |
Pages | 418-438 |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.18093/0869-0189-2021-31-4-418-438 |
Public URL | https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/3828131 |
Related Public URLs | https://researchonline.gcu.ac.uk/en/publications/ers-guidelines-on-the-diagnosis-and-treatment-of-chronic-cough-in |
Additional Information | In Russian. |
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