Airway clearance techniques – a proposed classification based on definitions?

Reychler, Gregory;Audag, Nicolas;Prieur, Guillaume;Poncin, William;Contal, Olivier
(2026) Expert Review of Respiratory Medicine — p. 1-17 (2026)

Files

Airway clearance techniques a proposed classification based on definitions .pdf
  • Open Access
  • Adobe PDF
  • 4.41 MB

Details

Authors
  • Reychler, GregoryUniversité Catholique de Louvain (UCLouvain)
    Author
  • Audag, NicolasUniversité Catholique de Louvain (UCLouvain)
    Author
  • Prieur, GuillaumeLe Havre Hospital
    Author
  • Poncin, WilliamUniversité Catholique de Louvain (UCLouvain)
    Author
  • Contal, Olivierorcid-logoHES-SO University of Applied Sciences and Arts Western Switzerland
    Author
Abstract
Introduction: Airway clearance techniques (ACT) are a longstanding modality of treatment in many chronic respiratory diseases. Their aims are to counteract airway obstruction by mobilizing airway secretions and/or by limiting the airway collapse. Areas covered: This review first outlines the physiological mechanisms underlying ACT. In a second part, it categorizes the ACT into seven distinct groups. These groups include both instrumental and non-instrumental ACT. Strategies such as physical activity and upper airway clearance techniques are also considered as ACT due to their complementary roles in mobilizing airway secretions. Expert opinion: The lack of standardized definitions for airway clearance techniques (ACT) leads to significant differences in the clinical practice and effects because the variability in physiological mechanisms. Studies show that both manual and instrumental ACT are influenced by therapist-dependent factors such as applied force, duration of the application, and patient positioning. To ensure reproducibility and effective teaching, a single, physiologically grounded description of ACT is urgently needed. ARTICLE HISTORY
Affiliations

Citations

Reychler, G., Audag, N., Prieur, G., Poncin, W., & Contal, O. (2026). Airway clearance techniques – a proposed classification based on definitions? Expert Review of Respiratory Medicine, 1-17. https://doi.org/10.1080/17476348.2026.2626079 (Original work published 2026)