Abstract

Abstract The outcome of anti-reflux surgery in patients with cough suspected to be induced by gastro-oesophageal reflux disease is frequently uncertain. The aims of this study were to assess the efficacy of laparoscopic fundoplication (LF) for controlling cough in a patient population suffering chronic cough when alternative aetiologies (e.g. asthma) had been excluded and pathologic gastro-oesophageal reflux had been confirmed on ambulatory pH monitoring, and to identify predictors of response. From a prospective database of 1,598 patients who had undergone laparoscopic fundoplication, 66 (4%) had a principal presenting symptom of chronic cough as well as objective evidence of gastro-oesophageal reflux disease (GORD). Patients completed questionnaires for GORD symptoms (modified DeMeester score) and severity of cough (visual analog scale) both before and after LF, and had pre-operative gastroscopy and 24-hour pH monitoring before operation. Patients were considered to have responded to LF if they had no cough or the cough had improved by 50% or more after operation. Follow-up data was available for 66/66 patients (100%), with a median follow-up time of 43 months (range 14–104 months) after operation. Cough was relieved in 40/66 (61%), while typical GORD symptoms (heartburn, regurgitation) was relieved in 44/49 (90%). The presence of typical GORD symptoms, oesophagitis, or pH study variables did not predict the response of the cough to LF. At 1 year, 67% of patients were satisfied with the results of their surgery, 20% were not and 13% were unsure. For comparison, the 1430/1598 patients in the database with no laryngopharyngeal symptoms had a satisfaction rate of 94%. Based on our study and available literature, it appears there are no reliable pre-operative clinical predictors of a satisfactory response of cough to LF. This probably reflects a current inability to obtain an accurate aetiological diagnosis of chronic cough, even in the presence of known abnormal gastro-oesophageal reflux disease. Regardless, in a well-chosen cohort of patients with chronic cough, LF can yield good patient satisfaction rates, albeit less than for patients with typical GORD symptoms.

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