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Heartburn as a Marker of the Success of Acid...
Journal article

Heartburn as a Marker of the Success of Acid Suppression Therapy in Chronic Cough

Abstract

PurposeGastro-oesophageal reflux disease (GORD) is commonly thought to play an important role in chronic cough and patients are often empirically treated with acid suppression therapy. We sought to investigate the response rate to acid suppression treatment in patients with and without heartburn attending two specialist cough clinics.MethodsA retrospective review of 558 consecutive patients referred to two specialist cough clinics was performed (UK and USA). Patients who were treated with acid suppression were included and their documented response to treatment was collected. Binary logistic regression was used to ascertain the value of reported heartburn in predicting the response of chronic cough to acid suppression therapy.ResultsOf 558 consecutive referrals, 238 patients were excluded due to missing data or cough duration of < 8 weeks. The remaining 320 patients were predominantly female (76%), with mean age 61 yrs (± 13) and 96.8% non-smokers, with chronic cough for 36 (18–117) months. Of 72 patients with heartburn, 20 (28%) noted improvement in their cough with acid suppression, whereas of 248 without heartburn, only 35 (14%) responded. Patients reporting heartburn were 2.7 (95% C.I. 1.3–5.6) times more likely to respond to acid suppression therapy (p = 0.007).ConclusionIn specialist cough clinics, few patients report a response of their chronic cough to acid suppression therapy. Nonetheless, heartburn is a useful predictor substantially increasing the likelihood of benefit.

Authors

Badri H; Satia I; Bansal V; Mangi MA; Tangaroonsanti A; DeVault KR; Lee AS; Houghton LA; Smith JA

Journal

Lung, Vol. 199, No. 6, pp. 597–602

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

December 1, 2021

DOI

10.1007/s00408-021-00496-w

ISSN

0341-2040

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