Title
WAO-ARIA consensus on chronic cough - Part III: Management strategies in primary and cough-specialty care. Updates inCOVID-19
Language
English
Description (en)
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.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.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.
Keywords (en)
Exhaled Nitric-Oxide; Clinical-Practice Guideline; Refractory Chronic Cough; Quality-Of-Life; Mucosal Eosinophilic Inflammation; Gastroesophageal-Reflux Disease; Airway Inflammation; Chest Guideline; Variant Asthma; Inhaled Corticosteroids
DOI
10.1016/j.waojou.2022.100649
Author of the digital object
Philip W.  Rouadi  (Eye and Ear University Hospital Beirut / Dar Al Shifa Hospital)
Ignacio J.  Ansotegui  (Hospital Quironsalud Bizkaia)
Alessandro  Fiocchi  (Bambino Gesù Children's Hospital IRCCS)
Motohiro  Ebisawa  (Sagamihara National Hospital)
Erika  Jensen-Jarolim  (University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna / Medical University of Vienna)
Olivia J. Ly.  Lesslar  (LifeSpan Medicine)
Jose Antonio  Ortego-Martell  (Autonomous University of Hidalgo)
Adnan  Custovic  (Imperial College London)
Luis  Caraballo  (University of Cartagena)
Bryan L.  Martin  (Ohio State University)
Yoon-Seok  Chang  (Seoul National University)
Michael  Levin  (University of Cape Town)
Manana  Chikhladze  (Akaki Tsereteli State University)
Luciana K.  Tanno  (University of Montpellier / WHO Collaborating Centre on Scientific Classification Support)
Lianglu  Wang
Jonathan A.  Bernstein  (University of Cincinnati)
James  Sublett  (University of Louisville)
Gary W. K.  Wong  (Chinese University of Hong Kong)
David  Peden  (University of North Carolina)
Giorgio Walter  Canonica
Georges S.  Juvelekian  (Hôtel-Dieu de France)
Ludger  Klimek  (Center for Rhinology and Allergology)
Sandra N.  Gonzalez Diaz  (Universidad Autónoma de Nuevo León)
René  Maximiliano Gómez  (Catholic University of Salta)
Mario  Morais-Almeida  (CUF Descobertas Hospital)
Peter K  Smith  (Griffith University)
Glenis K.  Scadding  (RNENT Hospital)
Peter W.  Hellings  (KU Leuven / University of Amsterdam / University Hospital Ghent / University Hospitals Leuven)
Usamah M.  Hadi  (American University of Beirut)
Fares H.  Zaitoun  (LAU-RIZK Medical Center)
Eliane  Abou-Jaoude  (International Cough Institute)
Sami L.  Bahna  (Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center)
Talal M.  Nsouli  (International Cough Institute)
Maryam Ali Y  Al-Nesf  (Hamad Medical Corporation)
Anahi  Yañez  (INAER - Investigaciones en Alergia y Enfermedades Respiratorias)
Mona S.  Al-Ahmad  (Kuwait University)
Samar A.  Idriss  (Eye and Ear University Hospital Beirut / Edouard Herriot Hospital)
Jean  Bousquet  (Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin / Berlin Institute of Health / Université Montpellier)
Tanya M.  Laidlaw  (Harvard Medical School)
Cecilio R.  Azar  (American University of Beirut Medical Center / Middle East Institute of Health / Clemenceau Medical Center )
Format
application/pdf
Size
1.1 MB
Licence Selected
CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 International
Type of publication
Article
Name of Publication (en)
World Allergy Organization Journal
Pages or Volume
20
Volume
15
Number
5
Publisher
Elsevier
Publication Date
2022
Content
Details
Object type
PDFDocument
Format
application/pdf
Created
14.08.2023 08:19:05
This object is in collection
Metadata
Veterinärmedizinische Universität Wien (Vetmeduni) | Veterinärplatz 1 | 1210 Wien - Österreich | T +43 1 25077-0 | Web: vetmeduni.ac.at