Research questions and hypotheses
i) Is a non-pharmacological cough control therapy feasible to treat chronic cough in
patients with ILD? Hypothesis: Given the results of previous non-pharmacological
interventions in patients with refractory cough, we predict that this intervention will
be feasible and well accepted in patients with ILD.
ii) Is a non-pharmacological cough control therapy more effective than pulmonary
rehabilitation (PR) alone to treat chronic cough in patients with ILD? Hypotheses: Given
the results of previous non-pharmacological interventions in patients with refractory
cough, we predict that improvements observed in participants receiving the
non-pharmacological intervention will exceed those receiving PR alone. Improvements are
expected in HRQOL (exceeding the minimal clinically important difference), intensity of
cough-related sensations and symptoms of fatigue.
Research Design The proposed research is a feasibility pre-post intervention study.
Study details:
Adults with ILD and chronic cough will be enrolled in this study. Potential eligible
patients will be recruited from the outpatient PR program at West Park Healthcare Centre
and St. Joseph's Healthcare. As the outpatient pulmonary rehabilitation program at West
Park Healthcare Center and St. Joseph's Healthcare will transition partially to virtual
meetings, the interactions between the research team and patients will be completed via
phone calls or online.
This research study will be delivered online using the Zoom Healthcare Plan, an online
platform that is available at West Park Healthcare Centre, and is used for
telerehabilitation programs. Participants will be enrolled into a PR program composed of
aerobic and strengthening exercises, disease-specific education and self-management, as
part of their usual care. Two weeks before termination of PR, participants will start the
non-pharmacological cough control therapy, following the intervention proposed by
Chamberlain colleagues (2017). Participants will attend four virtual sessions of 45 to 60
minutes of educational and self-management
This study will measure several clinical outcomes.
Feasibility will be reflected by the number of eligible patients enrolling
(enrolment rate of at least 75%) and completing the intervention (attendance rate of
at least 80%), compliance with the sessions and adverse events.
Leicester cough questionnaire
The King's Brief Interstitial Lung Disease (KBILD)
Modified Borg scale (mBorg
Cough Hypersensitivity Questionnaire (CHQ)
Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy Fatigue Scale (FACIT-F)
Global rating of change questionnaire (GRCQ)
Satisfaction Semi-structured interviews using open-ended questions will be conducted
before and after the cough control intervention to capture participants'
expectations and perspectives about the cough control therapy.