| Literature DB >> 25780768 |
Zachary J Bastian1, Robert W Bastian2.
Abstract
Objective. This study sought to: (1) quantify response rate and efficacy of amitriptyline, desipramine, and gabapentin in treating sensory neuropathic cough; and (2) describe an efficient treatment protocol. Study Design. This study is a retrospective case series. Methods. Persons diagnosed with sensory neuropathic cough during a one-year period were potential study candidates. To bolster the diagnosis credibility, only persons who had been treated elsewhere for gastroesophageal reflux disease, asthma, and allergy with no reduction of cough were included. Upon diagnosis of sensory neuropathic cough, each person was treated with either amitriptyline, desipramine, or gabapentin, titrating the dose upward to desired benefit or the dose limit. If the benefit was insufficient, another of the medications was used next, using a similar dose escalation strategy. Data points included patient demographics, initial and final medication, final dose, and degree of improvement. Results. 32 patients met the diagnostic and inclusion criteria and had a complete data set. 94% (30 of 32) of the patients responded to at least one of the medications. The 32 patients undertook a total of 45 single-medication trials. Patients reported symptom relief during 78% (14 of 18) of amitriptyline trials, 73% (11 of 15) of desipramine trials, and 83% (10 of 12) of gabapentin trials. At final dosage, symptom reduction averaged 77% on amitriptyline, 73% on desipramine, and 69% on gabapentin. Conclusion. Amitriptyline, desipramine, and gabapentin appear to vary in their effectiveness for individual cases of sensory neuropathic cough; across a whole cohort, symptom relief was similar in frequency and degree on any of the three medications. More evidence is needed to demonstrate more convincingly the effectiveness of these medications, but this data set suggests that each of these three medications deserves consideration in the codified treatment protocol presented here.Entities:
Keywords: Amitriptyline; Cough; Desipramine; Gabapentin; Neuralgia; Sensory neuropathy; Treatment
Year: 2015 PMID: 25780768 PMCID: PMC4358635 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.816
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Treatment protocol for sensory neuropathic cough.
| Step 1: First-line medication trial |
| • Medication: amitriptyline or desipramine; amitriptyline for patients 60 years old or younger and, due to potentially lesser side effects, desipramine for patients older than 60 (as a general guideline) |
| • Trial method: Take 10 mg daily, two hours before bed, for the first day or two. Then, until symptoms are decreased 80% or more, or until a maximum dose of 80 mg is reached, continue increasing the daily dose by 10 mg every one or two days. If breakthrough cough is clearly evident in afternoon and evening, add 10 or 20 mg at noon. |
| Step 2: Phone follow-up, either 14 days after starting the medication, or sooner, if the patient has forgotten the instructions or has a concern |
| • At every phone follow-up, the patient must supply: name of current medication, dose, and duration of use; percent reduction of symptoms globally; side effects, if any; questions, if any; and best contact information. Staff records this information for physician review and response. |
| • Physician tells staff to instruct the patient to continue increasing dose (if the patient notices any reduction in cough symptoms whatsoever), possibly with instructions for adjusting the logistics of use (for instance, adding a booster of dose of 10 or 20 mg if the patient has breakthrough coughing at a certain time of day), or else to taper off current medication and then to begin another medication (if the current medication’s dose limit has been reached, or if side effects have become unacceptable, without providing satisfactory benefit to the patient). |
| Step 3: Second-line medication trial (if needed) |
| • Medication: gabapentin (best to take with food, except at bedtime) |
| • Trial method: |
| • Days 1–3: 300 mg at bedtime |
| • Days 4–6: 300 mg at lunch and bedtime (600 mg total) |
| • Days 7–9: 300 mg at breakfast, mid-afternoon, bedtime (900 mg total) |
| • Days 10–12: 300 mg at breakfast, lunch, dinner, bedtime (1200 mg total) |
| • After Day 12: If insufficient response, patient may (as side effects permit) add another 300 mg to one of the daily 300-mg doses every three days, up to a maximum daily dose of 2,400 mg (four 600-mg doses) |
| • Repeat Step 2. |
| Step 4: Third-line, fourth-line, fifth-line, etc. medication trials (if needed) |
| • Citalopram, pregabalin, oxcarbazepine |
| • Capsaicin spray |
| Step 5: Gradual discontinuation trial (optional) |
| • An option for patients who achieve 80% or greater reduction of symptoms for at least two months |
| • Some patients will need long-term treatment, and some patients remit and relapse, with relapses often following upper respiratory infections. |
Notes.
Capsaicin spray is sometimes used for those who fail all medication trials. It is a topical spray administered to the posterior oropharynx. It appears to work either by gradually depleting substance p and thereby lowering the threshold for cough triggers, or as a counter-irritant to abort attacks in progress.
Courses of the treatment trials.
n = 32 patients; final medication tried in bold.
| Number of patients | First medication | Second medication | Third medication |
|---|---|---|---|
| 12 |
| ||
| 7 |
| ||
| 6 | Desipramine |
| |
| 3 | Amitriptyline |
| |
| 1 | Amitriptyline | Desipramine |
|
| 1 | Amitriptyline |
| |
| 1 | Amitriptyline | Gabapentin | |
| 1 |
|
Notes.
As mentioned in the footnote to Table 3, one of these patients went on to use capsaicin spray, with benefit.
Response quartiles, for patients at final medication and dose.
n = 32 patients.
| No response | Subtle 1–25% | Small 26–50% | Medium 51–75% | Large 76–100% |
| |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of patients | 2 | 2 | 7 | 5 | 16 |
|
| Percentage | 6 | 6 | 22 | 16 | 50 |
|
Notes.
One of these two patients went on to achieve 80% reduction of cough symptoms using capsaicin spray; note the footnote to Table 1 regarding capsaicin spray. The other patient tried amitriptyline and desipramine without benefit and never went on to a gabapentin trial.
Medication response.
n = 45 treatment trials, taken by the 32 patients (some patients tried more than one medication) Excluded from this table is a 46th trial in which one of the patients, after trying amitriptyline and gabapentin separately, took amitriptyline and gabapentin together and achieved a 25% reduction of symptoms.
| Medication | Number of | Number/% who | Avg. % reduction | Median final |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amitriptyline | 18 | 14/78 | 77 | 40 |
| Desipramine | 15 | 11/73 | 73 | 25 |
| Gabapentin | 12 | 10/83 | 69 | 1,350 |