Duloxetine lowers refractory chronic cough
Duloxetine reduced cough frequency and improved cough-related quality of life versus placebo in adults with refractory chronic cough.
*Randomized double-blind placebo-controlled trial; Level 1b (OCEBM).
Citation
Wang S, Wu H, Zhou Y, et al. The efficacy and safety of duloxetine in treating refractory chronic cough: a randomized clinical trial. BMC Medicine. 2026;24:82. doi:10.1186/s12916-025-04613-x
Background
Many patients with chronic cough continue to cough despite careful evaluation and usual treatments. Medicines that reduce nerve “over-response” may help, but options remain limited.
Patients
98 adults (18–70 years) with refractory chronic cough at one outpatient center in Shanghai, China; all had no anxiety or depression symptoms and had not improved with gabapentin. Key exclusions included smoking within 2 years, recent respiratory infection, major heart disease, and significant liver or kidney disease.
Intervention
Duloxetine, titrated to 20 mg three times daily for 8 weeks, then tapered.
Control
Matching placebo.
Outcome
Cough frequency (coughs per hour) and Leicester Cough Questionnaire score (higher is better). Safety: adverse events.
Follow-up Period
11 weeks (8-week treatment + 3-week follow-up).
Results
| Outcome (end of follow-up) |
Duloxetine |
Placebo |
| Coughs per hour (primary) |
33.12 (from 83.96) |
80.36 (from 87.67) |
| Leicester Cough Questionnaire total score (primary) |
14.88 (from 12.75) |
12.81 (from 12.17) |
| Nausea |
11.36% (NNH 9) |
0% |
| Dizziness |
15.91% (NNH 8) |
2.33% |
| Sleepiness |
9.09% (NNH 11) |
0% |
85/98 participants completed the trial; cough frequency was measured from 24-hour audio recordings reviewed by clinicians.
Limitations
Single-center study in China may limit generalizability. Participants had already failed gabapentin and had no mood symptoms, so results may not apply to broader chronic cough populations. Follow-up was short, so long-term benefit and stopping strategy are uncertain.
Funding
Chinese national and Shanghai municipal research grants; funders had no role.
Clinical Application
For refractory chronic cough after standard workup and failed gabapentin, consider duloxetine with slow dose increase; counsel about nausea, dizziness, and sleepiness.