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AbstractBackgroundPatients with chronic laryngopharyngeal symptoms, with or without pathologic reflux, frequently have poor response to standard therapies, which may be a result of overlapping cognitive‐affective processes. Therefore, the aims of this study included measuring psychosocial distress and laryngeal‐specific cognitive distress in patients with chronic laryngopharyngeal symptoms (LPS) as well as comparing these among laryngeal symptomatic patients with and without conclusive gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD).MethodsThis prospective, single‐center study enrolled adults with chronic LPS from 9/22 to 6/23. Patients completed eight questionnaires on quality of life, symptom burden, and psychosocial distress. The laryngeal cognitive affective tool (LCAT) assessed laryngeal‐specific hypervigilance and anxiety; LCAT scores ≥33 were elevated. All patients underwent objective testing with endoscopy and/or ambulatory reflux monitoring and were categorized as proven GERD (GER+) or no proven GERD (GER−).Key ResultsOne hundred twenty‐nine patients were included: 66% female, mean age 54.1 (17.5) years, mean BMI 27.6 (6.8) kg/m2, 66% Caucasian, 57% with an elevated LCAT, and 53% GER+. Moderate‐to‐severe anxiety was found in 39% and moderate‐to‐severe depression in 19%. An elevated LCAT alone or with an elevated anxiety/depression score was found in 58%. Patient‐reported outcomes scores, including LCAT scores (32.9 (13.8) GER− vs. 33.1 (12.6) GER+, p = 0.91), were similar between patients with and without GER+.Conclusions and InferencesPatients with chronic LPS experience heightened levels of hypervigilance, symptom‐specific anxiety, and psychosocial distress, regardless of the presence of pathologic GER.