View clinical trials related to Asthma.
Filter by:The objective is to evaluate the safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetic profile of a single subcutaneous injection of HBM9378 (SKB378) at different doses in healthy Chinese subjects.
The analysis of the exposome of severe asthmatic patients and its correlation with the response profile to biotherapies used in the treatment of severe asthma and/or the frequency of exacerbations, could make it possible to identify individual and environmental components influencing the evolution of the asthmatic pathology and/or response to treatment. An interventional approach could thus be developed, taking into account in particular the determinants of indoor air quality as well as the obstacles to the implementation of current recommendations for the prevention of exacerbations. The patient will thus be returned to the center and considered as a main actor in his clinical history by offering him the most suitable intervention possible, according to the evaluation of his exposome, in order to ultimately reduce the morbidity and mortality linked to exacerbations. This interventional approach could then be validated on a larger scale in a national multicenter study involving a larger number of patients.
Unicentric prospective real life study designed to analyse the efficacy of Dupilumab to reduce bronchial inflammation of asthma measured by inflammatory cell counts obtained in induced sputum and other related characteristics (small airway dysfunction and mucin production) in uncontrolled severe asthma patients in the real life setting without control group
Human rhinovirus is also called the "common cold virus" because it causes at least half of all of the common colds experienced each year. In patients with asthma, getting a rhinovirus infection can cause worsening of asthma symptoms. Although these symptoms are well known, researchers do not fully understand how the virus worsens these asthma symptoms, nor do they really know whether virus infection causes longer term structural changes (often referred to as airway remodeling) in the airways. This study plans to address and answer these questions. Doing so will provide the researchers with a better understanding of how to treat the worsening of asthma that are caused by human rhinovirus infections. The epithelial cell is the cell that lines the surface of your airways from your nose down to your lungs, and is also the cell type that gets infected by rhinovirus. At present, it is thought that the virus causes symptoms by changing epithelial cell biology in a way that causes airway inflammation. Some of these inflammatory molecules are also thought to cause scarring (remodeling) of the airways, which over time, may lead to a loss of lung function. In order to examine how the virus causes inflammation, many earlier studies have used experimental infection with the virus and have measured various markers of inflammation. The purpose of this study is to compare the levels of inflammatory and remodeling products in the airways of study participants with mild to moderate asthma and healthy, non-asthmatic subjects after infection with rhinovirus (the common cold virus).
This study is a multi-center, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled Phase Ⅱ clinical study to evaluate the efficacy, safety, PK characteristics, PD effects and immunogenicity of CM326 in subjects with moderate to severe asthma. The study consists of three periods, including an up to 4-week screening period, a 52-week treatment period, and a 12-week safety follow-up period.
To study the expression level of biomarkers such as GITRL in peripheral blood of children with asthma and analyze their correlation with the severity of asthma. To study the predictive value of biomarkers level for the occurrence and development of asthma. And to provide supplementary detection means and predictive indicators for the diagnosis of asthma and the severity of asthma.
This study will assess the efficacy and safety of dexpramipexole as an adjunctive oral therapy in participants with inadequately controlled asthma with an eosinophilic phenotype and a history of asthma exacerbations.
This study is a multi-center, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled Phase Ⅱ/Ⅲ clinical study to evaluate the efficacy, safety, PK characteristics, PD effects and immunogenicity of CM310 in subjects with moderate to severe asthma. The study consists of three periods, including an up to 4-week screening period, a 52-week randomized treatment period, and a 4-week safety follow-up period.
This is a single-center study of 80 subjects with asthma including those with obesity and metabolic dysfunction (MD), those with obesity and without metabolic dysfunction, those with severe asthma and mucus plugging and those with severe asthma and without mucus plugging. Screening data will be reviewed to determine participant eligibility. Participants who meet all inclusion criteria will participate in a cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) visit to compare lung function markers and change in oxygen saturation between obese patients with and without MD and severe asthma patients with and without mucus plugging.
The primary purpose of this study is to evaluate the effects of Fluticasone Furoate (FF)/ Umeclidinium (UMEC)/ Vilanterol (VI) on lung function compared with FF/VI after 24 weeks of treatment.