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Title: Predictors of objective cough frequency in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Author: Sumner H, Woodcock A, Kolsum U, Dockry R, Lazaar AL, Singh D, Vestbo J, Smith JA. Journal: Am J Respir Crit Care Med; 2013 May 01; 187(9):943-9. PubMed ID: 23471467. Abstract: RATIONALE: Cough is one of the principal symptoms of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) but the potential drivers of cough are likely to be multifactorial and poorly understood. OBJECTIVES: To quantify cough frequency in an unselected group of subjects with COPD and investigate the relationships between cough, reported sputum production, smoking, pulmonary function, and cellular airway inflammation. METHODS: We studied 68 subjects with COPD (mean age, 65.6 ± 6.7 yr; 67.6% male; 23 smokers; 45 ex-smokers) and 24 healthy volunteers (mean age, 57.5 ± 8.9 yr; 37.5% male; 12 smokers; 12 nonsmokers). Subjects reported cough severity, cough-specific quality of life, and sputum expectoration and performed spirometry, sputum induction, cough reflex sensitivity to capsaicin, and 24-hour ambulatory cough monitoring. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: COPD current smokers had the highest cough rates (median, 9 coughs/h [interquartile range, 4.3-15.6 coughs/h]), almost double that of COPD ex-smokers (4.9 [2.3-8.7] coughs/h; P = 0.018) and healthy smokers (5.3 [1.2-8.3] coughs/h; P = 0.03), whereas healthy volunteers coughed the least (0.7 [0.2-1.4] coughs/h). Cough frequency was not influenced by age or sex and only weakly correlated with cough reflex sensitivity to capsaicin (log C5 r = -0.36; P = 0.004). Reported sputum production, smoking history, and current cigarette consumption strongly predicted cough frequency, explaining 45.1% variance in a general linear model (P < 0.001). In subjects producing a sputum sample, cough frequency was related to current cigarette consumption and percentage of sputum neutrophils (P = 0.002). CONCLUSIONS: Ambulatory objective monitoring provides novel insights into the determinants of cough in COPD, suggesting sputum production, smoking, and airway inflammation may be more important than sensitivity of the cough reflex.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]