Abstract

To investigate the relationships between fractional exhaled nitric oxide (FENO) and clinical characteristics and outcomes in patients with subacute cough. Patients with subacute cough (n = 189) after upper respiratory tract infection were enrolled in this single-center prospective study, and were divided into low-FENO (<25 ppb) and high-FENO groups (≥25 ppb). Empirical therapies (without inhaled or systemic corticosteroids) were prescribed based on clinical experience and follow-up until the disease course reached 8 weeks. FENO values, cough symptom scores (CSS), and Leicester Cough Questionnaire (LCQ) scores were obtained, analyzed, and compared between two groups of patients. The low-FENO and high-FENO groups comprised 136 and 53 patients, respectively. The multiple regression analysis showed that blood eosinophil count and gender were independent factors for elevated FENO (β = 1.38, 0.25, respectively). LCQ scores, total CSS, and daytime CSS were comparable between the low-FENO and high-FENO groups. The nighttime CSS of the high-FENO group were significantly higher than that of the low-FENO group (P = .03). The CSS and LCQ score were improved in both groups but were comparable between groups after 10 days treatment. Patients with subacute cough and high-FENO levels have more severe nocturnal cough than those of patients with low-FENO levels. However, FENO levels do not appear to correlate with the clinical outcomes or treatment response. The significance of FENO in the management of subacute cough needs to be further evaluated, at least in the current empirical treatment without corticosteroids.

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