Levodropropizine A Valuable Peripheral Anti-tussive for Dry Cough in Primary Care Settings: Latest Indian Clinicians' Review
India: Levodropropizine, a nonopioid peripheral antitussive, may be a valuable agent for providing symptomatic relief in nonproductive, dry cough in Indian primary care settings by reducing cough severity and frequency, while offering a superior safety profile and comparable efficacy to central antitussives.
The recently published review in the Journal of the Association of Physicians of India, July 2025 issue comprehensively studied the efficacy and safety of levodropropizine across diverse age groups and various etiologies of dry cough.
Cough is the second most common presenting symptom in Indian clinical practice, with dry cough having a significant burden. Although a symptom, it can be distressing and significantly impact quality of life (QoL). For symptomatic relief of dry cough, traditional centrally acting antitussives are commonly used, but they are associated with safety and tolerability concerns such as addiction, dependence, respiratory depression, sedation, and CNS suppression. Levodropropizine, a non-opioid peripherally acting antitussive acts on C-fibers present on vagal afferents in the larynx, suprapharyngeal area, and tracheobronchial tree (i.e. in the afferent arm of the cough reflex arc). Hence, it demonstrates high efficacy but with a better safety profile compared to central antitussives like codeine and dextromethorphan.
Scientific Authority | Recommended Considerations |
2022 Indian Association of Paediatrics (IAP) | Levodropropizine at 1–2 mg/kg once or twice daily for presumed viral cough. |
2021 Italian Society of Pediatric Allergy and Immunology (SIAIP) | Levodropropizine recommended as a suitable option for acute cough in children and adolescents |
2020 Indian Environmental Medical Association (EMA) | Levodropropizine for dry cough due to URTI, acute/chronic bronchitis, cough variant asthma, pulmonary tuberculosis, interstitial lung disease (ILD), and primary or metastatic lung cancer. |
2017 CHEST | Levodropropizine for symptomatic treatment of opioid-resistant cough. |
Evidence from clinical studies, meta-analyses, and guidelines highlights levodropropizine’s efficacy in reducing cough frequency, severity, and nocturnal symptoms. It has demonstrated efficacy in various etiologies of non-productive cough. Also a favorable safety profile with minimal central effects and good tolerability across pediatric, adult and geriatric age groups has been demonstrated across various studies. Levodropropizine, as a peripheral antitussive, may serve as a useful option for the symptomatic treatment of patients with nonproductive cough.
Reference: Nayar S, Vora A, Tiwaskar M, et al. Levodropropizine: Comprehensive Review of the Peripheral Antitussive. J Assoc Physicians India 2025;73(7):e35-e44.
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