A cough is what brings us to the doctor's office the most

Publicly released:
Australia; NSW; VIC; QLD; SA; NT
Photo by Towfiqu barbhuiya on Unsplash
Photo by Towfiqu barbhuiya on Unsplash

Patients suffering from a chronic cough should have that cough thoroughly investigated and X-rayed if there are any red flags for an underlying disease, according to new recommendations from Australian researchers. The researchers say coughing is the most common symptom prompting Aussies to see a doctor with 8.8% of the population estimated to have a chronic cough - a cough lasting more than two months in adults and over a month in children. They say chronic cough can result in high healthcare costs and indicate some serious conditions - with the recommendations including separate pathways for diagnosing a child or an adult, and considering Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders with a chronic cough to be a high risk group.

Media release

From: Medical Journal of Australia (MJA)

New recommendations for treating chronic cough

Conducting a thorough investigation of a patient’s history of chronic cough and ordering chest x-rays are among the new recommendations in an updated position statement for the diagnosis and management of chronic cough.
 
A chronic cough is defined as a daily cough of greater than four weeks in children and greater than eight weeks in adults (here).
 
Cough is the most common symptom leading to medical consultation, write Associate Professor Julie Marchant and her colleagues in the Medical Journal of Australia.
 
“Chronic cough results in significant health care costs, impairs quality of life and may indicate the presence of a serious underlying condition,” Associate Professor Marchant and colleagues wrote.
 
Associate Professor Marchant is a paediatric respiratory physician at the Queensland Children’s Hospital and a senior research fellow in the QUT Cough Asthma and Airways Research Group at the Australian Centre for Health Services Innovation (AusHSI).
 
Prevalence of chronic cough
 
The prevalence of chronic cough in adults has been estimated to be 9.6% globally and 8.8% in Australia (here and here), with the prevalence of chronic cough gradually increasing to a peak when people are aged in their 60s (here).
 
The condition is estimated to occur in 3% of people who have never smoked, 4% of people who used to smoke, and 8% of people who currently smoke (here). Overall, chronic cough presents more commonly in middle-aged women (here).
 
In a recent study of Australian children presenting to emergency departments, 7.5% had chronic cough, and 20–23% had persistent cough at day 28 (here).
 
The disproportionate burden on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples
 
The prevalence of chronic wet cough in children living in Indigenous communities is around 13% (here).
 
“First Nations Australians are disproportionately affected by conditions that present with chronic wet cough, such as protracted bacterial bronchitis and bronchiectasis,” wrote Associate Professor Marchant and her colleagues.
 
“The mortality difference between First Nations and non-First Nations Australians with bronchiectasis is about 22 years (here).”
 
“In 180 First Nations children aged < 5 years presenting to primary care in urban Queensland for any reason, 24% had a history of chronic cough in the previous 12 months (here).”
 
Recommendations
 
Several recommendations for the prevention and management of chronic cough are listed.

“Assessment of children and adults requires a focused history of the chronic cough to elicit any red flag cough pointers that may indicate an underlying disease,” Associate Professor Marchant and her colleagues wrote. 
 
“Further assessment with examination should include a chest x-ray and spirometry (age, > 6 years).
 
“Separate paediatric and adult diagnostic management algorithms should be followed.”

“[The] management of the underlying condition(s) should follow specific disease guidelines, as well as address adverse environmental exposures and patient/carer concerns,” they wrote.

“Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander adults and children should be considered high risk groups.”
 
The authors thanked the Lung Foundation Australia and the Thoracic Society of Australia and New Zealand for their support in the preparation of the guidelines.

Read the position statement in the Medical Journal of Australia

Please remember to credit the MJA.
 
The Medical Journal of Australia is a publication of the Australian Medical Association.

Attachments

Note: Not all attachments are visible to the general public. Research URLs will go live after the embargo ends.

Research Wiley, Web page
Journal/
conference:
Medical Journal of Australia
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: Queensland University of Technology (QUT), Menzies School of Health Research, Flinders University, The University of Queensland, The University of Melbourne, Monash University, Griffith University, Western Sydney University, University of Newcastle
Funder: The authors received no specific funding for this work. See paper for personal funding information.
Media Contact/s
Contact details are only visible to registered journalists.