Dwyer Christopher D, Johns Michael M, Shin Jennifer J, Carroll Thomas L
Department of Surgery, Division of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, Harvard Medical School, Brigham & Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
USC Voice Center, Caruso Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, Keck School of Medicine, California, Los Angeles, USA.
Laryngoscope. 2025 Jul;135(7):2454-2462. doi: 10.1002/lary.32109. Epub 2025 Mar 21.
Assess practice trends among laryngologists within the United States surrounding neuromodulator use for chronic cough treatment.
Anonymous 29-item survey comprised of a mixture of multiple choice, Likert scale, and free-text answers was electronically distributed to practicing laryngologists in the United States.
Eighty-five laryngologists from 26 states responded. The majority (96.5%) prescribe neuromodulators for chronic cough and are the preferred first-line treatment for refractory explained chronic cough (37.8%) and unexplained chronic cough (50.6%). Gabapentin (97.6%), amitriptyline (91.5%), and tramadol (73.2%) are the most used. The preferred first-line drugs were also gabapentin (45.1%), amitriptyline (39.0%), and tramadol (11.0%). Most wait 3-6 months before making changes when a neuromodulator is successful, then wean to the lowest possible cough-controlling dose (68.3%) or taper off completely (24.4%). When a neuromodulator fails: 43.9% wean and try another neuromodulator; others shift to a superior laryngeal nerve (SLN) block (24.4%). When cough recurs almost immediately after weaning an effective neuromodulator, most will re-initiate it again (97.6% likely or highly likely). If the cough recurs in the future, typical practice includes reinitiating the same prior effective neuromodulator at its previously tolerated effective dose (40.5%) or re-titrating to the new effective dose needed (51.9%).
Laryngologists routinely prescribe neuromodulators for unexplained and refractory chronic cough. Gabapentin and amitriptyline are the preferred first-line agents, generally titrated to maximal effect, balancing against side effects. A low threshold to reinitiate previously effective neuromodulators exists when cough recurs. If an initial neuromodulator is unsuccessful, either a different neuromodulator or a SLN block is considered.
评估美国喉科医生在使用神经调节剂治疗慢性咳嗽方面的实践趋势。
一份由29个项目组成的匿名调查问卷,包含多项选择题、李克特量表和自由文本答案,以电子方式分发给美国执业喉科医生。
来自26个州的85名喉科医生做出了回应。大多数(96.5%)为慢性咳嗽开具神经调节剂,是难治性明确病因慢性咳嗽(37.8%)和不明原因慢性咳嗽(50.6%)的首选一线治疗方法。加巴喷丁(97.6%)、阿米替林(91.5%)和曲马多(73.2%)是最常用的药物。首选的一线药物也是加巴喷丁(45.1%)、阿米替林(39.0%)和曲马多(11.0%)。当神经调节剂成功时,大多数人会等待3至6个月再做调整,然后逐渐减至可能的最低咳嗽控制剂量(68.3%)或完全停药(24.4%)。当神经调节剂失败时:43.9%的人逐渐减药并尝试另一种神经调节剂;其他人转而采用喉上神经(SLN)阻滞(24.4%)。当停用有效的神经调节剂后咳嗽几乎立即复发时,大多数人会再次重新开始使用(97.6%可能或极有可能)。如果咳嗽在未来复发,通常的做法包括以先前耐受的有效剂量重新开始使用相同的先前有效的神经调节剂(40.5%)或重新滴定至所需的新有效剂量(51.9%)。
喉科医生通常为不明原因和难治性慢性咳嗽开具神经调节剂。加巴喷丁和阿米替林是首选的一线药物,通常滴定至最大效果,并权衡副作用。咳嗽复发时,重新开始使用先前有效的神经调节剂的阈值较低。如果初始神经调节剂未成功,则考虑使用不同的神经调节剂或进行SLN阻滞。