• Chest · Mar 2015

    Practice Guideline

    Tools for Assessing Outcomes in Studies of Chronic Cough: CHEST Guideline and Expert Panel Report.

    • Louis-Philippe Boulet, Remy R Coeytaux, Douglas C McCrory, Cynthia T French, Anne B Chang, Surinder S Birring, Jaclyn Smith, Rebecca L Diekemper, Bruce Rubin, Richard S Irwin, and CHEST Expert Cough Panel.
    • Institut universitaire de cardiologie et de pneumologie de Québec, Quebec City, QC, Canada. Electronic address: lpboulet@med.ulaval.ca.
    • Chest. 2015 Mar 1; 147 (3): 804814804-814.

    BackgroundSince the publication of the 2006 American College of Chest Physicians (CHEST) cough guidelines, a variety of tools has been developed or further refined for assessing cough. The purpose of the present committee was to evaluate instruments used by investigators performing clinical research on chronic cough. The specific aims were to (1) assess the performance of tools designed to measure cough frequency, severity, and impact in adults, adolescents, and children with chronic cough and (2) make recommendations or suggestions related to these findings.MethodsBy following the CHEST methodologic guidelines, the CHEST Expert Cough Panel based its recommendations and suggestions on a recently published comparative effectiveness review commissioned by the US Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, a corresponding summary published in CHEST, and an updated systematic review through November 2013. Recommendations or suggestions based on these data were discussed, graded, and voted on during a meeting of the Expert Cough Panel.ResultsWe recommend for adults, adolescents (≥ 14 years of age), and children complaining of chronic cough that validated and reliable health-related quality-of-life (QoL) questionnaires be used as the measurement of choice to assess the impact of cough, such as the Leicester Cough Questionnaire and the Cough-Specific Quality-of-Life Questionnaire in adult and adolescent patients and the Parent Cough-Specific Quality of Life Questionnaire in children. We recommend acoustic cough counting to assess cough frequency but not cough severity. Limited data exist regarding the performance of visual analog scales, numeric rating scales, and tussigenic challenges.ConclusionsValidated and reliable cough-specific health-related QoL questionnaires are recommended as the measurement of choice to assess the impact of cough on patients. How they compare is yet to be determined. When used, the reporting of cough severity by visual analog or numeric rating scales should be standardized. Previously validated QoL questionnaires or other cough assessments should not be modified unless the new version has been shown to be reliable and valid. Finally, in research settings, tussigenic challenges play a role in understanding mechanisms of cough.

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