Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT04256733 |
Other study ID # |
188-88 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
Early Phase 1
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
May 1, 2019 |
Est. completion date |
February 13, 2021 |
Study information
Verified date |
August 2023 |
Source |
University of Montana |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
The purpose of this study is to investigate a modified behavioral treatment for chronic cough
due to cough hypersensitivity syndrome (CHS). This type of CC is a non-productive cough that
is due, in part, to over-expression of transient receptor potential vanilliod (TRPV)
receptors in the airway epithelium, which contribute to a dry cough elicited by typically
non-tussive stimuli (e.g., cold air, smells) or by low doses of tussive stimuli (e.g.,
smoke). Currently available treatment options are limited to neuromodulator medications
(e.g., gabapentin, amytriptiline) and behavioral cough suppression therapy (BCST), neither of
which is 100% effective. The primary component of BCST is teaching patients to suppress their
cough in the presence of an urge-to-cough. Studies have confirmed a reduction in cough
sensitivity (as tested with inhaled capsaicin) following 1-4 weeks of successful cough
suppression. However, patients with severe CHS are not able to suppress their cough in the
presence of uncontrollable environmental stimuli and, hence, do not respond well to the
therapy. The purpose of this study is to determine the potential of treating CHS by
implementing BCST while stimulating cough with progressive concentrations of inhaled diluted
aerosolized capsaicin. The investigators hypothesize this treatment will result in a
reduction in cough-reflex sensitivity, cough-related quality of life, and cough frequency.
Description:
The study will be a randomized, placebo-controlled, blinded study. It will take place in
three phases, across 7 weeks.
WEEK 1: BASELINE TESTING AND TRAINING (approximate time = 1 hour).
1. Cough sensitivity testing: Standardized procedures that have been established and
approved by the FDA will be used to determine cough sensitivity. Participants will
inhale capsaicin vapor (a known cough stimulant) through a nebulizer with dosimeter,
that delivers a specific dose of capsaicin in a mist form. They will inhale doubling
doses of capsaicin mist from .49 micromolar to 1000 micromolar. The testing will be
stopped when the investigators find the dose that causes five coughs or after giving the
1000 micromolar dose, whichever comes first. This testing will take approximately 30
minutes.
2. Urge-to-cough (UTC) testing: Participants be asked to report their UTC on a scale from 0
(no UTC) to 10 (maximum UTC) after each mist of capsaicin and after being presented with
the following stimulants/tasks that cause some people to cough: perfume, bleach,
vinegar, wood chips, laundry soap, cleaning wipe, deep and fast breath through the
mouth, sustained voicing, reading a 55 word passage, and yelling a short phrase). This
testing will take about 10 minutes.
3. Cough-related quality of life: Participants will complete the Leicester Cough
Questionnaire which is a 23-item validated questionnaire designed to measure
cough-related quality of life. It will take about 5 minutes.
4. Cough suppression training. Participants will be trained in cough suppression
strategies. These strategies include 1) relaxed throat breathing where they inhale
quickly through the nose and exhale through tightly pursed lips, and 2) cough
suppression swallow, which involves swallowing saliva or a sip of water with as much
effort as possible and while pressing hands together tightly. This training will take
approximately 15 minutes.
5. Cough frequency testing: Participants will carry a small audio recording device with a
small microphone that attaches to the participant's shirt for 24 hours. The recording
device will be in a small carrying case (about half the size of a typical cell phone)
that can clip to a belt or waistband. Participants will return the recording device to
the investigators at or before the first treatment visit (see below). The audio
recording will be analyzed by computer software that counts the number of coughs in the
24-hour period. (NOTE: The audio recording will not be listened to by any PERSON and the
recording will be deleted after it is analyzed by the computer software.)
(Following baseline testing, participants will be randomly assigned to either the treatment
group or placebo group.)
WEEKS 2-4: TREATMENT. Participants will attend treatment sessions twice per week for three
weeks. Participants will use the breathing strategies following inhalation of either
progressive doses of diluted capsaicin (experimental condition) or repeated exposures to a
single sub-threshold concentration of diluted capsaicin (placebo condition). Participants
will do this no more than twelve times per session. Each session will take approximately 45
minutes. If a participant misses a treatment session, the investigators will attempt to
re-schedule that session. Each participant must complete at least five of treatment sessions
to remain in the study.
WEEKS 5 AND 7: POST-TREATMENT TESTING. Outcome measures, as in the baseline phase, will be
take at one-week and three-weeks post-treatment. The LCQ will be measured again at
three-months post-treatment.