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Management of cough in lung cancer

Management of cough in lung cancer. Clinical guidelines for the management of cough in lung cancer: report of a UK Task Group on Cough. Molassiotis A 1 , Smith JA 2 , Bennett MI 3 , Blackhall F 4 , Taylor D 5 , Zavery B 6 , Harle A 4 , Booton R 7 ,

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Management of cough in lung cancer

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  1. Management of cough in lung cancer

  2. Clinical guidelines for the management of cough in lung cancer: report of a UK Task Group on Cough. Molassiotis A1, Smith JA2, Bennett MI3, Blackhall F4, Taylor D5, Zavery B6, Harle A4, Booton R7, Rankin EM8, Lloyd-Williams M9, Morice AH10.

  3. Epidemiology • Cough is common symptom • 23-37% of all cancer patients • 47-86% in lung cancer • Not always well managed • Little evidence to guide practice

  4. Formation of task group • Literature reviews • Peer review by UK committees • Submitted for publication

  5. Pathophysiology • Coughing serves to protect airway from irritants • Stimuli provoke cough via vagus nerve through • chemoreceptors (C fibres) • mechanoreceptors (A delta fibres)

  6. In lung cancer • Ulceration of mucosa • Mechanical stimulation • Release of inflammatory mediators • Chemoreceptor stimulation • Sensitises peripheral nerves • Also: • Obstruction • Pleural effusion • Infection • Fistulas • Carcinomatosis

  7. Recommendations

  8. Assessment • History • Type of cough (productive / non-productive) • Trigger factors • Nocturnal or day time • Co-morbid conditions • COPD • Heat failure • No validated symptom scale available

  9. Assessment • Drugs causing cough • Methotrexate • Bleomycin • ACE inhibitors • Further investigations • ?CXR • CT

  10. Treat reversible causes • COPD / asthma • Inhaled bronchodilators • Steroid (prednisolone 30mg daily) • Infection (bronchietctasis, LRTI) • antibiotics • GI reflux • PPI (omeprazole) • Metoclopramide or domperidone for non-acid reflux-

  11. Treat the cancer • Chemo • Improves symptoms including cough • External radiotherapy • Brachytherapy

  12. Symptomatic management • Linctus • Glycerol • Simple linctus • Trial of steroid • Prednisolone • (or dexamethasone)

  13. Centrally acting agents • Codeine • 30mg qds • Morphine or methadone • If codeine no help • Morphine 5-10mg bd • No dose response relationship for cough

  14. Peripherally acting agents • Antitussive agents • Levodropropizine, • Moguisteine • Levocloperastine • Local anaesthetic agents • nebulised bupivacaine • benzonatate

  15. In general • Low levels of evidence for these recommendations • Peripheral and intermittent approaches before central and continuous treatment • In lung cancer • many patients already on opioids for pain • Central approaches maximised already

  16. EXPERIMENTAL Carbamazepine, Thalidomide, Gabapentin, Baclofen Amitriptylline LOCAL ANAESTHETICS Nebulised Lidocaine Benzonatate PERIPHERALLY-ACTING ANTITUSSIVES Levodropropizine, Moguisteine, Levocloperastine adjunctive therapies, anxiety management and vocal hygiene techniques OPIOIDS Morphine/Methadone Dextromethorphan, Codeine, Hydrocodone CONSIDER ORAL STEROID TRIAL 2 weeks CANCER SPECIFIC systemic chemotherapy/RT endobronchial therapy, PDT, palliative RT CO-MORBIDITIES COPD, reflux, asthma, infections

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