Cough Hypersensitivity Syndrome: Why Its Use Is Inappropriate in Children
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Defining Chronic Cough in Children
3. What Is Cough Hypersensitivity Syndrome
4. Why Assigning Cough Hypersensitivity Syndrome as a Diagnostic Concept Is Inappropriate in Children
5. Other Major Differences between Children and Adults with Respect to Cough-Related Issues
6. Summary
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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First Author Year, Country | Study Design | Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria | Asthma Parameters Used | Cough Measurement | N; Age; Follow-Up Duration | Main Aim(s) | Main Study Findings | Implication/Conclusion |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chang [22] 1997, Australia | Prospective longitudinal | Inclusion: Children > 6 yrs hospitalised with asthma Exclusion: Concurrent other chronic disease | Acute asthma severity: functional severity score (FSS) and acute asthma severity (AAS) scale. Coughers: always or usually cough with asthma symptoms. Non-coughers: Sometimes/with infections only or never cough | CRS using capsaicin (C2 and C5) | Coughers n = 15; median age = 9 yrs (IQR 3.6) Non-coughers n = 16; 9 yrs (IQR 3.1) Tests undertaken when hopsitalised, repeated at 7–10 days and 4–6 W | Hypothesis: “in children with asthma who cough as a major symptom, CRS is heightened during an acute severe exacerbation of asthma but not in the non-acute phase and airway calibre or its change correlates with CRS” | CRS of “coughers” significantly higher than non-coughers (mean difference log C2 0.77 umol (95% CI 0.35 to 1.18), C5 0.72 (0.26 to 1.18)) during acute asthma but not after the exacerbation. FEV1 and its change correlated with neither CRS nor its change. Both groups similar in smoke exposure, asthma meds, FSS, AAS scores | “CRS is heightened in acute severe asthma in the subgroup of children who have cough as a significant symptom with their asthma episodes” |
Chang [37] 1997, Australia | Cross section, single centre | Asthma: recurrent episodes of wheeze and tachypnoea that responded to salbutamol | CRS using capsaicin (C2 and C5) | Asthma n = 35, median age 10.3 yrs (range 6–16); recurrent dry cough n = 47, age 9 (5–17); CF n = 27, age 11.9 (7–18); controls n = 100, age 10.7 (6–17) | To determine if CRS is (1) altered in children with asthma, recurrent cough, and cystic fibrosis (CF) and (2) influenced by age, gender or FEV1 | CRS increased in children with recurrent cough, and reduced in children with cystic fibrosis, compared with children with asthma and controls. Age influenced CRS in controls. In children with asthma, C2 and C5 influence by FEV1 % was predicted | Children should be matched for age and FEV1 when cough sensitivity is used in comparative studies | |
Chang [51] 1997, Australia | Cross section, single centre | Inclusion: children with asthma and healthy controls. Exclusion: not described | Non-acute asthma. Controls: healthy children | C5, AHR to hypertonic saline (HS), spirometry | Asthma n = 12, mean age = 10.3 yrs Controls n = 9, mean age = 12.7 | To determine whether inhalation of capsaicin for the CRS test before HS challenge alters AHR of children with and without asthma | Both groups: capsaicin did not alter FEV1 Asthma: mean of the difference in log PD15 was within the equivalence range of the HS challenge in children with asthma. | CRS testing with capsaicin did not alter AHR to HS. HS-induced bronchoconstriction and capsaicin likely stimulate different pathways |
Chang [52] 2002, Australia | Prospective cohort | Inclusion: baseline: stable asthma (no respiratory tract infection or exacerbation for at least 4 weeks) and retested during days 1, 3, 7, and 28 of an exacerbation. Exclusion: other chronic respiratory disease | Asthma in non-acute and acute exacerbation | Asthma diary, quality of life, lung function (FEV1, FEV1 variability), AHR to HS, cough diary, CRS, and inflammatory markers (sputum IL8, ECP and MPO; and serum ECP) | Baseline n = 21; exacerbation n = 11. Median age 10.5 yrs, IQR = 3.9 | To examine and relate common asthma indices (QOL, AHR, lung function, asthma diary) with cough indices (CRS, cough diary) and markers of eosinophilic and neutrophilic inflammation (serum ECP, sputum ECP, IL-8 and MPO) in children with asthma during a non-acute, acute, and resolution phase of asthma | CRS outcome measures (C2 and C5) did not correlate with any marker of clinical severity (asthma score, cough score, QOL), pulmonary function indices (FEV1, forced vital capacity (FVC), FEV1 variability) or inflammatory marker (IL-8, serum ECP, sputum ECP, serum eosinophils, sputum eosinophils, sputum neutrophils, MPO) of asthma during any of the test days (baseline, D1, D3, D7, and D28). | No relationship between CRS to sputum eosinophils, IL8, ECP or MPO. CRS does not reflect eosinophilic airway inflammation. |
Ferenc [44] 2018, Slovak Republic | Cross section, single centre | Inclusion: asthma, baseline FEV1 > 80% and no respiratory symptoms for at least 4 W. Exclusion: not described. | Asthma: “wheezing, cough, dyspnea or chest tightness at rest OR on exercise and a positive response to exercise challenge” | CRS using capsaicin (C2 and C5) Broncho-dilators withheld for 72 h | n = 42; mean age 14.1 yrs ± SD 2.1. No follow-up | “clarify changes of cough reflex sensitivity before and after exercise challenge testing in asthma children” | C2 pre-exercise challenge median = 9.77 um/L (95%CI 6.10–10.99); post = 7.32 (6.10–14.65) (p = 0.58). C5 respective values: pre = 19.53 (14.65–80.57) post = 39.06 (24.42–58.59) p = 0.09 | Cough reflex not significantly altered post exercise. Asthma medications not described and whether children had cough with exercise not mentioned |
Kunc [45] 2020, Slovak Republic | Cross section | Inclusion: asthma, baseline FEV1 > 80% and no respiratory symptoms for at least 4 W. Exclusion and controls: not described. | Asthma: “wheezing, cough, dyspnea or chest tightness at rest OR on exercise and a positive response to exercise challenge” | CRS using capsaicin (C2 and C5) Broncho-dilators withheld for 72 h | Asthma n = 25; mean age 9 yr SD 1; Controls n = 15; 8 ± 1 No follow-up | “clarify changes of cough reflex sensitivity in asthma children” | C2: Asthma group mean 4.25 µmol/L (95%CI 2.25–8.03) vs. control 10.61 (5.28–21.32) p = 0.024. C5: 100.27 (49.30–203.93) vs. 56.53 (19.69–162.35) respectively, p = 0.348 | C2 increased in children with asthma but not C5. Inconsistent results. Asthma medications not described |
Mochizuki [50] 1995, Japan | Cross section for aim 1, RCT for aim 2 | Inclusion: Stable asthma and no upper respiratory tract infections for >2 W, no spontaneous coughing/other symptoms, no medication for >16 h before the tests | Stable asthma (recurrent dyspnoea with wheeze and diagnosed for >2 yrs). | PD20 of ultrasonically nebulized distilled water (UNDW) and histamine. Concentration of acetic acid (AA) inducing the first cough (cough threshold) | Study 1: n = 40. Mean age 11.2 yrs SD 2. Study 2: n = 12. Mean age 11.3 yrs 2.4 SD 2 | Aims: to study (1) the relationship between UNDW and acetic acid inhalation challenge compared to histamine; and (2) the effect of inhaled furosemide | UNDW-PD20 correlated with AA cough threshold (r = 0.57, p < 0.001). Histamine-PC20 did not correlate with AA cough threshold or UNDW-PC20. “Frusemide exerted protective effect on UNDW and AA but not on histamine”. | Mechanism of hyper-responsiveness to UNDW and AA-induced cough may be similar but is dissimilar to histamine |
Shimuzu [49] 2016, Japan | Cross sectional, Single centre | Inclusion: asthma without respiratory infections at >4 W and no asthma-related symptoms at the time of the study. No meds for >12 h before the tests. Exclusion: not mentioned. | Asthma: recurrent dyspnoea with wheeze, and diagnosis established for >1 yr | Histamine-induced FEV1 change, CRS to acetic acid (AA), Spirometry, AHR to histamine | n = 19, mean age 10·6 yr, standard error of mean 0·6 | Determine: (1) effect of histamine-induced broncho-constriction and salbutamol-induced bronchodilatation on AA cough threshold”, and (2) relationship between AA cough threshold and AHR to histamine in children with asthma | No relationship between CRS thresholds and change in FEV1, and PD20 | CRS to acetic acid and bronchomotor tone are independent pathways in children with asthma |
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Chang, A.B.; Irwin, R.S.; O’Farrell, H.E.; Dicpinigaitis, P.V.; Goel, S.; Kantar, A.; Marchant, J.M. Cough Hypersensitivity Syndrome: Why Its Use Is Inappropriate in Children. J. Clin. Med. 2023, 12, 4879. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12154879
Chang AB, Irwin RS, O’Farrell HE, Dicpinigaitis PV, Goel S, Kantar A, Marchant JM. Cough Hypersensitivity Syndrome: Why Its Use Is Inappropriate in Children. Journal of Clinical Medicine. 2023; 12(15):4879. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12154879
Chicago/Turabian StyleChang, Anne B., Richard S. Irwin, Hannah E. O’Farrell, Peter V. Dicpinigaitis, Suhani Goel, Ahmad Kantar, and Julie M. Marchant. 2023. "Cough Hypersensitivity Syndrome: Why Its Use Is Inappropriate in Children" Journal of Clinical Medicine 12, no. 15: 4879. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12154879
APA StyleChang, A. B., Irwin, R. S., O’Farrell, H. E., Dicpinigaitis, P. V., Goel, S., Kantar, A., & Marchant, J. M. (2023). Cough Hypersensitivity Syndrome: Why Its Use Is Inappropriate in Children. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 12(15), 4879. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12154879