Pharmacotherapy for Chronic & Intractable Hiccups in Palliative Care: A Mixed Methods Systematic & Umbrella Review
Journal Title
Journal of Pain and Symptom Management
Publication Type
Online publication before print
Abstract
CONTEXT: Chronic and intractable hiccups are a debilitating symptom in palliative care, yet the evidence for their pharmacological management is sparse and of low certainty, as certain study designs are frequently excluded from traditional systematic reviews. OBJECTIVES: To synthesise all available quantitative and qualitative evidence for the pharmacological management of chronic and intractable hiccups in adults receiving palliative care. METHODS: We conducted a mixed methods systematic review, including a rapid umbrella review, following a registered PROSPERO protocol (CRD42024514442) in accordance to the PRISMA and SWiM guidelines. Seven electronic databases, trial registries and grey literature sources were searched from inception until August 2025 for studies of any design and systematic reviews. Quantitative data on hiccup reduction or cessation following pharmacological use, and qualitative phenomena of interest on patient and clinician experiences were extracted. Studies were critically appraised via JBI and AMSTAR-2 tools, synthesised separately using a convergent segregated approach, and then integrated narratively. This was performed independently by two reviewers. RESULTS: A total of 88 primary studies (85 quantitative, two qualitative and one mixed methods) and six systematic reviews were included. The quantitative synthesis, comprising 156 patients, identified gabapentin and baclofen as the most frequently reported effective agents, alongside various dopamine antagonists, benzodiazepines, medication rotation, combination therapies and novel approaches. The qualitative synthesis revealed four themes: the profound psychosocial impact of hiccups, perceived treatment ineffectiveness, a disconnect between patient experience and clinical awareness, and a patient preference for symptom management over cure. CONCLUSION: The evidence for management of chronic and intractable hiccups in palliative care is of very low certainty and likely subject to significant publication bias. Clinical goals should be reframed from cure to "palliative control", prioritising functional improvement and a reduction in symptom burden.
Keywords
chronic; hiccups; intractable; palliative; persistent; singultus
Department(s)
Palliative Care
Open Access at Publisher's Site
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2025.11.010
Terms of Use/Rights Notice
Refer to copyright notice on published article.


Creation Date: 2026-01-06 04:10:57
Last Modified: 2026-01-06 04:12:50
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