What the latest British Thoracic Society statement means for you
🌬️ Why This Matters
If you live with aspergillosis, Allergic Bronchopulmonary Aspergillosis (ABPA), or bronchiectasis, coughing can dominate your life. It’s tiring, painful, and socially awkward — especially when people assume it means infection.
Doctors used to see cough as just a symptom of another problem, but the British Thoracic Society (BTS) Clinical Statement on Chronic Cough in Adults (2023) recognises something new:
For many people, a cough can become a condition in its own right — caused by airway and nerve hypersensitivity, not just infection.
This matters for aspergillosis patients because fungal allergy and inflammation make the airways especially sensitive.
💡 What Is “Chronic Cough”?
A chronic cough is one lasting eight weeks or more.
It may be:
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Dry – little or no mucus
-
Productive – thick sputum (common in bronchiectasis or chronic aspergillosis)
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Triggered by dust, cold air, perfume, or strong scents
For people with aspergillosis, several overlapping causes may exist:
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Fungal colonisation or infection
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Allergic inflammation (ABPA)
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Bronchiectasis and mucus retention
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Reflux or post-nasal drip
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Nerve hypersensitivity
This is why one treatment rarely fixes everything — different “treatable traits” must be addressed together.
🧬 Why It Happens
1️⃣ The Hypersensitive Cough Reflex
People with aspergillosis often develop overactive airway nerves — so normal irritants like dust, scent, or cold air trigger coughing fits.
This “cough reflex hypersensitivity” happens because:
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Ongoing inflammation damages the airway lining.
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Nerve endings in the throat and lungs become over-responsive.
-
Even mild triggers set off powerful reflexes.
This is a real physiological process, not psychological.
It’s why cough can continue even when infection is under control.
2️⃣ Treatable Traits – Finding the Real Drivers
| Treatable Trait | What It Means | What Helps |
|---|---|---|
| Airway infection or colonisation | Persistent fungi or bacteria | Antifungal or antibiotic therapy, sputum tests |
| Allergic inflammation | ABPA or asthma-type airway swelling | Corticosteroids, biologics (e.g., mepolizumab, benralizumab) |
| Cough reflex hypersensitivity | Overactive airway nerves | Speech therapy, nerve-modulating medication |
| Airway clearance problems | Mucus that’s hard to shift | Physiotherapy, saline or mucolytic therapy |
| Reflux or postnasal drip | Acid or sinus drainage irritation | Reflux management, ENT care |
Identifying these traits helps your clinician personalise treatment.
💊 Medications That Can Cause or Worsen Cough
The BTS statement highlights that some medicines can trigger or amplify chronic cough — especially in people with already-sensitive lungs.
🔹 ACE Inhibitors (Blood pressure or heart disease)
Examples: Ramipril, Lisinopril, Enalapril, Perindopril
-
Can cause a dry, tickly cough due to bradykinin build-up.
-
Happens in ~1 in 5 users, sometimes months after starting.
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GP can switch to a similar drug (ARB – e.g., losartan) that doesn’t cause cough.
🔹 Beta Blockers (Heart or migraine medicines)
Examples: Atenolol, Propranolol, Bisoprolol
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May tighten airways, worsening wheeze or cough.
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Safer “lung-selective” versions exist but should still be monitored.
🔹 Inhalers
Examples: Fluticasone, Budesonide, Salbutamol
-
Can irritate the throat if used without a spacer or if technique is poor.
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Always rinse or gargle after use, and ask your pharmacist to review inhaler technique.
🔹 Antifungal or Reflux Medicines
-
Antifungals (itraconazole, voriconazole) don’t directly cause cough, but reflux or nausea can trigger coughing indirectly.
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PPIs (omeprazole, lansoprazole) usually help reflux-related cough, but long-term use should be reviewed regularly.
🔹 Other Drugs
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Amiodarone, methotrexate, and some biologics can rarely cause cough due to lung inflammation.
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Nasal sprays or lozenges with menthol/alcohol may irritate already-sensitive airways.
💬 If you suspect a medicine is contributing, don’t stop it suddenly — speak to your doctor or pharmacist first.
They can review interactions using the
👉 BNF Interactions Checker – NICE Medicines Guidance.
🔍 How Doctors Assess Chronic Cough
BTS recommends a structured pathway:
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Basic tests: chest X-ray, spirometry, bloods (eosinophils, IgE), FeNO if available.
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Further tests: CT scan, allergy or sputum studies if initial tests are abnormal.
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Trait-based review: identifying overlapping issues — fungal, allergic, nerve-related, or reflux-related.
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Specialist referral: to a Cough Clinic or Aspergillosis Centre if symptoms persist.
🧴 Pharmacists: Your Safety Specialists
Pharmacists — hospital or community — are crucial for managing long-term cough and medication safety:
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Check for cough-inducing drugs or interactions.
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Advise on best timing for antifungal and steroid doses.
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Help switch to fragrance-free personal or cleaning products.
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Liaise with your GP and consultant to fine-tune treatment.
🧭 Regular medication reviews every few months can prevent small problems becoming major triggers.
💬 How It Feels — and Why It’s Misunderstood
People with aspergillosis often describe:
“A tickle that turns into a spasm I can’t stop.”
“People think I’m ill, but it’s just the air or perfume.”
This happens because your airway nerves and immune cells are already primed.
Coughing doesn’t mean you’re infectious — it’s your body’s protective reflex in overdrive.
🩺 What Helps Most
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Optimise your aspergillosis and ABPA treatment.
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Cough-control physiotherapy or speech therapy for nerve-related cough.
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Airway clearance techniques for mucus.
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Identify and avoid irritants: perfume, smoke, strong detergents, cold air.
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Ask about biologics if inflammation remains active despite steroids.
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Use nerve-modulating medicines only under specialist advice.
🧘 Emotional Health Matters Too
Living with a chronic cough can cause anxiety, embarrassment, and isolation.
Support from counsellors, CBT therapists, or patient groups helps manage this stress — and can actually reduce cough frequency through better relaxation and breathing control.
🌱 Key Takeaway
Chronic cough in aspergillosis isn’t “just a symptom” — it’s often a mix of airway inflammation, fungal allergy, nerve hypersensitivity, and sometimes side effects of medicines.
The good news is that every contributing factor is treatable once identified — and cough can improve significantly with the right combination of medical, physical, and environmental care.
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