Cough hypersensitivity syndrome: clinical measurement is the key to progress
- Alyn H. Morice1⇑,
- Eva Millqvist2,
- Maria G. Belvisi3,
- Kristina Bieksiene4,
- Surinder S. Birring5,
- Kian Fan Chung6,
- Roberto W. Dal Negro7,
- Peter Dicpinigaitis8,
- Ahmad Kantar9,
- Lorcan P. McGarvey10,
- Adalberto Pacheco11,
- Raimundas Sakalauskas4 and
- Jaclyn A. Smith12
- 1Centre for Cardiovascular and Metabolic Research, Respiratory Medicine, Hull York Medical School, University of Hull, Cottingham, UK
- 2Dept of Internal Medicine/Respiratory Medicine and Allergology, University of Gothenburg, Gothenburg, Sweden
- 3Respiratory Pharmacology Group, Pharmacology and Toxicology Section, National Heart and Lung Institute, Imperial College London, London, UK
- 4Dept of Pulmonology and Immunology, Lithuanian University of Health Science, Kaunas, Lithuania
- 5Division of Asthma, Allergy and Lung Biology, King's College London, London, UK
- 6National Heart and Lung Institute, Imperial College London and Biomedical Research Unit, Royal Brompton and Harefield NHS Trust, London, UK
- 7Centro Nazionale Studi di Farmacoeconomia e Farmacoepidemiologua Respiratoria CESFAR, Verona, Italy
- 8Einstein Division/Montefiore Medical Center, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New York, NY, USA
- 9Paediatric Cough and Asthma Centre, Istituti Ospedalieri Bergamaschi, Bergamo, Italy
- 10Centre for Infection and Immunity, Queen's University Belfast, Belfast, UK
- 11Chronic Cough Unit, Pneumology Service, Hospital Ramón y Cajal, Madrid, Spain
- 12Centre for Respiratory and Allergy, University of Manchester, University Hospital of South Manchester, Manchester, UK
- Alyn H. Morice, Centre for Cardiovascular and Metabolic Research, Respiratory Medicine, Hull York Medical School, University of Hull, Castle Hill Hospital, Castle Road, Cottingham, East Yorkshire, HU16 5JQ, UK. E-mail-a.h.morice{at}hull.ac.uk
Abstract
Cough hypersensitivity syndrome can aid the understanding of patients with chronic cough. It is not merely a symptom http://ow.ly/JXCaN
From the authors:
We thank R.D. Turner and G.H. Bothamley for their supportive comments concerning our task force report on chronic cough [1]. There is much to agree with in their remarks. But perhaps we would differ with respect to their emphasis and reliance on clinical measurement as the cornerstone of diagnosis and management. Understanding a patient's illness requires a careful synthesis of history, examination, and finally, specific investigations. Dependence on a single strand or even several strands decreases the physician's perception of the true nature of the illness.
The analogy of cough hypersensitivity syndrome with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) was deliberately chosen. COPD is an invented and artificial paradigm, which nonetheless is useful in conveying information. No one thinks COPD is a single disease. R.D. Turner and G.H. Bothamley would have us believe that because a physiological measurement (forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1)) is useful in assessing the patient with airflow obstruction, it defines the illness. All experienced clinicians will have seen patients with gross emphysema but with a well preserved FEV1, who do not fit into their COPD box. Similarly, chronic pain is now widely considered a disease in its own right (with its own International Classification of Diseases code). In this syndrome a fair degree of progress has been made in our understanding despite the lack of a specific tool to “measure” clinical pain.
In chronic cough great efforts have been made, many by the authors of the task force report, to enumerate the dreadful suffering of patients with this disorder. Three basic modalities have been explored. First, cough challenge which was initially used in 1954 and although refined has not entered routine clinical practice since it does not differentiate health from disease with sufficient discrimination (an optimist would say we have yet to find the right challenge). However, challenges are clearly of use in phenotyping patients [2], assessing tussive mechanisms and clarifying target engagement for therapies directed at specific channels. Secondly, various subjective measures for assessing quality of life and cough-related symptoms have been developed. Finally, most progress has been made in the area of cough counting, where with modern technology reproducible measures of the acoustic signature of cough can now be made over prolonged periods. However, none of these measures express the whole syndrome of chronic cough, but rather describe the different facets as in a three circle Venn diagram [3]. A patient with double incontinence through coughing or life-threatening cough syncope may have an unbearable quality of life and yet only have occasional paroxysms of coughing. These three metrics, even if perfected, will only give an incomplete portrait of the complex clinical picture.
Our correspondents are correct in suggesting that there is much future work to be carried out on cough hypersensitivity syndrome. However, the accusation that little or no progress has been made is surely incorrect. The developments enumerated above have allowed clinical trials to be undertaken with rigorously defined end-points, which are at last showing promise of therapeutic success [4–6]. The purpose of the task force report was not to chronicle these developments. It was rather to highlight the value of seeing cough as an overarching clinical syndrome due to an afferent neuronal hypersensitivity, a view that was endorsed by the overwhelming majority of key opinion leaders surveyed. Just as COPD has helped us to understand and promulgate the management of patients with smoking-related airflow obstruction, cough hypersensitivity syndrome can aid the understanding of patients with chronic cough. It is not merely a symptom.
Footnotes
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Conflict of interest: Disclosures can be found alongside the online version of this article at erj.ersjournals.com
- Received January 26, 2015.
- Accepted January 27, 2015.
- Copyright ©ERS 2015