WAO-ARIA consensus on chronic cough – Part III: Management strategies in primary and cough-specialty care. Updates in COVID-19
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Idriss, Samar A
Bousquet, Jean
Laidlaw, Tanya M
Azar, Cecilio R
Al-Ahmad, Mona S
Yanez, Anahi
Al-Nesf, Maryam Ali Y
Nsouli, Talal M
Bahna, Sami L
Abou-Jaoude, Eliane
Zaitoun, Fares H
Hadi, Usamah M
Hellings, Peter W
Scadding, Glenis K
et al.
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Background Chronic cough management necessitates a clear integrated care pathway approach. Primary care physicians initially encounter the majority of chronic cough patients, yet their role in proper management can prove challenging due to limited access to advanced diagnostic testing. A multidisciplinary approach involving otolaryngologists and chest physicians, allergists, and gastroenterologists, among others, is central to the optimal diagnosis and treatment of conditions which underly or worsen cough. These include infectious and inflammatory, upper and lower airway pathologies, or gastro-esophageal reflux. Despite the wide armamentarium of ancillary testing conducted in cough multidisciplinary care, such management can improve cough but seldom resolves it completely. This can be due partly to the limited data on the role of tests (eg, spirometry, exhaled nitric oxide), as well as classical pharmacotherapy conducted in multidisciplinary specialties for chronic cough. Other important factors include presence of multiple concomitant cough trigger mechanisms and the central neuronal complexity of chronic cough. Subsequent management conducted by cough specialists aims at control of cough refractory to prior interventions and includes cough-specific behavioral counseling and pharmacotherapy with neuromodulators, among others. Preliminary data on the role of neuromodulators in a proof-of-concept manner are encouraging but lack strong evidence on efficacy and safety.
Objectives The World Allergy Organization (WAO)/Allergic Rhinitis and its Impact on Asthma (ARIA) Joint Committee on Chronic Cough reviewed the recent literature on management of chronic cough in primary, multidisciplinary, and cough-specialty care. Knowledge gaps in diagnostic testing, classical and neuromodulator pharmacotherapy, in addition to behavioral therapy of chronic cough were also analyzed.
Outcomes This third part of the WAO/ARIA consensus on chronic cough suggests a management algorithm of chronic cough in an integrated care pathway approach. Insights into the inherent limitations of multidisciplinary cough diagnostic testing, efficacy and safety of currently available antitussive pharmacotherapy, or the recently recognized behavioral therapy, can significantly improve the standards of care in patients with chronic cough.
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World Allergy Organization Journal
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15
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5
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© 2022 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. on behalf of World Allergy Organization. This is an open access article under the CC BY NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
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Immunology
Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Allergy
Immunology
Upper airway cough syndrome
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Rouadi, PW; Idriss, SA; Bousquet, J; Laidlaw, TM; Azar, CR; Al-Ahmad, MS; Yanez, A; Al-Nesf, MAY; Nsouli, TM; Bahna, SL; Abou-Jaoude, E; Zaitoun, FH; Hadi, UM; Hellings, PW; Scadding, GK; et al., WAO-ARIA consensus on chronic cough – Part III: Management strategies in primary and cough-specialty care. Updates in COVID-19, World Allergy Organization Journal, 2022, 15 (5), pp. 100649