Cough Clinical Trial
Official title:
Randomized, Controlled, Double Blind Clinical Study on the Assessment of Efficacy, Safety and Palatability of "KalobaTuss® Children", a Syrup for the Treatment of Cough in Pediatric Age (3-6 Years).
Cough of children is one of the most frequent events for which parents ask for a medical
consult and it is a true challenge for pediatrics during daily practice.
In the majority of cases, it is self-limiting, but its persistence could become exasperating
and it could reduce quality of life and social activities.
Even if inappropriate prescription of antitussive pharmacological treatment in children has
been reduced, pediatrics prescribing attitudes do not still always are reflecting accurate
treatment of cough.
Furthermore, pediatric approach is always compromised by parental exaggerate perception of
symptoms and usual consequent requirement of pharmacological prescription of antibiotics,
that they consider the appropriate and effective therapeutic option for cough.
The World Health Organization identifies honey as a potential demulcent treatment for cough.
On the light of the above considerations and since available pediatric treatments for acute
cough are limited by lack of demonstrated efficacy, a pediatric cough syrup product
containing Acacia honey as well as specific fractions of resins, polysaccharides, saponins,
flavonoids and sugars derived from Malva sylvestris extract, Inula helenium, Plantago major
extract, Helichrysum stoechas (KalobaTuss) was developed to be clinically tested on
persisting cough of children. Investigators evaluated through a randomized, double blind
controlled clinical study the effects of KalobaTuss on persistent cough in children aging 3-6
years. The effects of Kalobatuss were compared with effects of placebo on nocturnal and
daytime persistent cough for eight days. Objective of the study was to evaluate the clinical
efficacy of KalobaTuss by using as primary endpoint the assessment of changes in day- and
night-time cough score.
Cough of children is one of the most frequent events for which parents ask for a medical
consult and it is a true challenge for pediatrics during daily practice. Cough is perhaps the
most troubling symptom for children suffering from upper respiratory tract infections (URIs)
and their parents. Often It results in discomfort to the child and loss of sleep for both
children and parents.
In the majority of cases, persistent cough is self-limiting, but its persistence could become
exasperating and it could reduce quality of life and social activities.
The influence of persistent cough of children on family's life can create growing discomfort.
Indeed, children with acute cough may experience transient disability which leads to lose
parents' work and school days so increasing overall cost for its management. Generally,
parents' concerns increase when children's cough lasts for more than a week. Consequently,
often occurs that parents seek for a medical consult with requirement of drug treatment, even
if the most of antitussive drugs lack of proved evidence of effectiveness and safety.
Even if inappropriate prescription of antitussive pharmacological treatment in children has
been reduced, pediatrics prescribing attitudes do not still always are reflecting accurate
treatment of cough.
Furthermore, pediatric approach is always compromised by parental exaggerate perception of
symptoms and usual consequent requirement of pharmacological prescription of antibiotics,
that they consider the appropriate and effective therapeutic option for cough.
Epidemiological data indicate that cough in children is much more feared than in adults and a
substantial proportion of individuals think of cough as "a disease". Also a recent Italian
survey confirms this view by suggesting that some pediatricians' therapeutic attitudes should
be substantially improved in order to achieve better management of cough in children and to
minimize the burden of cough. Moreover, it often happens that attempting to treat cough,
children are administered with over-the-counter products having little or no scientific
evidence of proven efficacy.
The World Health Organization identifies honey as a potential demulcent treatment for cough.
Administration of honey before bedtime has been reported by parents as being preferable to
dextromethorphan, diphenhydramine or placebo for symptomatic relief of their child's
nocturnal cough and sleeping difficulty due to URIs. A separate clinical entity is cough when
is without an organic cause. Such a persistent involuntary cough without a cause is
considered to be a functional disorder.
On the light of the above considerations and since available pediatric treatments for acute
cough are limited by lack of demonstrated efficacy, a pediatric cough syrup product
containing Acacia honey as well as specific fractions of resins, polysaccharides, saponins,
flavonoids and sugars derived from Malva sylvestris extract, Inula helenium, Plantago major
extract, Helichrysum stoechas (KalobaTuss) to be clinically tested on persisting cough of
children, has been developed. Researchers investigated through a randomized, double blind
controlled clinical study the effects of KalobaTuss or placebo on persistent cough in
children aging 3-6 years. Aim of this trial is to compare the effects of Kalobatuss with
effects of placebo on nocturnal and daytime persistent cough for eight days.
Methods This randomized, double-blind controlled clinical study was carried out in the
pediatric consulting rooms of the Azienda Ospedaliera Provinciale of Messina together with
the Azienda ospedaliera Universitaria Policlinico "G. Martino of Messina, Italy. Children
recruited for the study were divided in two groups: children belonging to the active group
received the syrup KalobaTuss and the second group received a placebo as syrup formulation.
Randomization was performed according to a table generated by Excel program. The
double-blinding was released and the treatment groups to be revealed only after the analysis
of the study results. Children aged between 3 and 6 years, with persistent cough for at least
three consecutive days, which led parents to the need for medical consultation, participated
in the study. Children with history of obstructive pulmonary diseases, cystic fibrosis,
neuropathies, heart disease, diabetes and immunodeficiencies were excluded. Children suitable
according to the inclusion criteria were randomly assigned to one of the treatment groups
(KalobaTuss or placebo). Parents or tutors according children participation signed the
informed consent form. The two treatment regimens were administered 4 doses a day, 5 ml each,
for 8 days. The appearance, consistency, organoleptic characteristics and viscosity of
KalobaTuss and placebo were similar.
The study was approved by the Ethic Committee of Azienda Ospedaliera Universitaria
Policlinico "G. Martino" with protocol number 95/18 on 17 December 2018. The trial was
conducted according to the ethical principles of the Seoul revision (2008) of the Helsinki
Declaration and Good Clinical Practice.
Objective of the study was to evaluate the clinical efficacy of KalobaTuss by using as
primary endpoint the evaluation and analysis of changes in day- and night-time cough score
assessed through a questionnaire filled by parents. Cough was clinically diagnosed and
evaluated by the pediatrician during the first visit and successively monitored by parents by
filling a daily diary. At the end of the administration period pediatrician visited again
children and collected the daily diary for each child.
The sample size was obtained assuming a mean cough score of 3 points in both groups at
baseline, and a mean change in cough score of 2 and 1 points respectively for the arm treated
with the study product and the placebo arm.
110 children with persistent cough were enrolled, 106 (96.36%) completed the treatment. 54
children received the KalobaTuss syrup and another 52 children received the placebo syrup.
Four children, two from each group, left the study before the end of treatment.
The median age of children completing the study was 53.02 ± 12.02 months (range, 38-70
months; median age 4.3 months), with no significant difference in age between the two
treatment arms (p= 0.8181).
54 children (50.8 %) were boys, of which 28 (51.85%) in the KalobaTuss syrup arm and 26
(48.15%) in the placebo arm. The mean duration of coughing before enrollment was 3.53 ± 0.57
(SD) for the KalobaTuss syrup and 3.52 ± 0.58 (SD) for the placebo arm, with no significant
difference between the two arms (P= 0.93624). None of the children monitored for the study
needed to receive antibiotics or any other pharmacological therapy during the days of
treatment and for the follow-up period of one week after the end of the study.
Adverse events (AEs) were monitored during all the study period. An AE was defined as an
inconvenient medical event occurring during the study period whether or not it was linked to
the study procedure or the study product. A severe AE (SAE) was defined as a medical event
resulting in death, a life-threatening situation, requiring inpatient admission or
prolongation of hospitalization, and/or resulting in severe or persistent subject disability
or incapacity.
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