Erschienen in:
01.12.2007 | Review Paper
Efficacy of diphenhydramine against cough in humans: a review
verfasst von:
Ingunn Björnsdóttir, Thomas Ray Einarson, Lárus Steinþór Guðmundsson, Rannveig Alma Einarsdóttir
Erschienen in:
International Journal of Clinical Pharmacy
|
Ausgabe 6/2007
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Abstract
Aim
To determine the efficacy of diphenhydramine against cough due to respiratory infection or irritation in patients/subjects without comorbidities.
Method
Two reviewers independently identified English language studies, searching on: clinical trials, randomized, diphenhydramine (OR dimenhydrinate), antitussive agents, cough (combine using AND). Sources were: Medline (1966–2005), Embase (1980–2005), Cochrane and references from retrieved articles. Two other reviewers, blinded to study origin selected studies, inclusion criteria being: diphenhydramine monotherapy against placebo, double-blinded, randomized, clinical trial, intention-to-treat, dropout information. The blinded reviewers evaluated the selected studies on a quality scale.
Results
Eleven articles were identified, 7 were rejected (4 not placebo controlled, 2 had no diphenhydramine, 1 not blinded), leaving 4 articles, that were included in the evaluation and scored 20, 21, 25 and 26 out of a maximum of 32. In these selected studies, a total of 162 people were examined, 65 on diphenhydramine, 63 on placebo and 34 in a crossover setting. There was a total of 13 dropouts. The crossover studies demonstrated significant effect; 27–56% reduction in 20 healthy volunteers and 21–26% reduction in 13 patients (originally 14, one outlier left out), whereas the active versus placebo studies did not.
Conclusion
In spite of the 60 years that the substance has been on the market, only few studies have properly evaluated the effect of diphenhydramine against cough. Presumptions about efficacy of diphenhydramine against cough in humans are not univocally substantiated in literature.