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Camlipixant in Refractory Chronic Cough: A Phase 2b, Randomized, Placebo-controlled Trial (SOOTHE)

Smith, Jaclyn A.; Birring, Surinder S.; Blaiss, Michael S.; McGarvey, Lorcan; Morice, Alyn H.; Sher, Mandel; Carroll, Kevin J.; Garin, Margaret; Lanouette, Sylvain; Shaw, Joan; Yang, Ronghua; Bonuccelli, Catherine M.

Authors

Jaclyn A. Smith

Surinder S. Birring

Michael S. Blaiss

Lorcan McGarvey

Mandel Sher

Kevin J. Carroll

Margaret Garin

Sylvain Lanouette

Joan Shaw

Ronghua Yang

Catherine M. Bonuccelli



Abstract

Rationale: There is no broadly accessible treatment for patients with refractory chronic cough, a disease characterized by chronic cough that persists despite treatment for other cough-related etiologies or has no identified underlying cause. Objectives: SOOTHE (NCT04678206), a phase 2b, randomized, placebo-controlled trial, evaluated the efficacy and safety of P2X3 antagonist camlipixant in adults with refractory chronic cough (cough duration, ⩾1 yr; baseline awake cough frequency, ⩾25 coughs/h). Methods: After a single-blind, 16-day placebo run-in, patients were randomized (1:1:1:1) to receive camlipixant 12.5, 50, or 200 mg twice daily or placebo for 4 weeks. The primary endpoint was change from baseline to Day 28 in objective 24-hour cough frequency. Secondary endpoints included cough severity and cough-related quality of life. Measurements and Main Results: Overall, 310 patients were randomized. A statistically significant reduction in placebo-adjusted 24-hour cough frequency was seen in the 50 mg (-34.4%; 95% confidence interval, -50.5 to -13.3; P = 0.0033) and 200 mg (-34.2%; 95% confidence interval, -50.7 to -12.2; P = 0.0047) camlipixant arms. All camlipixant arms showed a trend for greater improvement in cough severity visual analog scale and Leicester Cough Questionnaire scores over placebo. Camlipixant was well tolerated with no serious treatment-emergent adverse events reported. Taste alteration occurred in 4.8-6.5% of patients in camlipixant arms (vs. 0% with placebo); these were usually mild-moderate. Conclusions: Camlipixant treatment reduced cough frequency and improved patient-reported outcomes in patients with refractory chronic cough, with an acceptable safety profile. Clinical trial registered with www.clinicaltrials.gov (NCT04678206).

Citation

Smith, J. A., Birring, S. S., Blaiss, M. S., McGarvey, L., Morice, A. H., Sher, M., Carroll, K. J., Garin, M., Lanouette, S., Shaw, J., Yang, R., & Bonuccelli, C. M. (2025). Camlipixant in Refractory Chronic Cough: A Phase 2b, Randomized, Placebo-controlled Trial (SOOTHE). American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, 211(6), 1038-1048. https://doi.org/10.1164/rccm.202409-1752OC

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Mar 5, 2025
Online Publication Date Jun 5, 2025
Publication Date Jun 1, 2025
Deposit Date Jun 16, 2025
Publicly Available Date Jun 17, 2025
Journal American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine
Print ISSN 1073-449X
Publisher American Thoracic Society
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 211
Issue 6
Pages 1038-1048
DOI https://doi.org/10.1164/rccm.202409-1752OC
Keywords Chronic cough; P2X3 antagonists; Refractory chronic cough; Therapeutics
Public URL https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/5238397

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