View clinical trials related to Asthma.
Filter by:This study is a retrospective cohort study of patients diagnosed with asthma based on the data extracted from the MDV database. The study period is from 1st Jun 2016 to 29th February 2020 .
mINSPIRERS_RCT aims to assess the magnitude of the effect of a mobile app for improving asthma control in adolescents and adults with persistent asthma, followed at primary and secondary care in Portugal.
This is an observational, descriptive, open-label, prospective, 6-month study including a group of patients with a first prescription of IND/GLY/MF with sensor and a group with a first prescription of IND/GLY/MF without sensor.
The goal of this research study is to compare the impact of video directly observed therapy on inhaler technique accuracy with participants receiving video directly observed therapy vs. participants receiving standard asthma care. Participants will be randomized between the two groups. We will follow up and compare the two groups to see if they have improved asthma control as measured by symptom-free days, higher inhaler technique at 3-month follow up, higher checklist scores on a standardized inhaler technique checklist, higher proportion of days covered (PDC) of their inhaled asthma controller medication, and have fewer acute care visits for asthma.
Uncontrolled asthma in school-aged children is a significant public health problem. Latino children living in low-income contexts are at increased risk for uncontrolled asthma compared to non-Latino white children, and stress is an unaddressed factor in this disparity. Therefore, the purpose of the current study is to test an intervention program that teaches families skills to cope with asthma-related and other sources of stress. Specifically, the study will compare the effects of the combined coping skills + asthma management program with a standard asthma management program in 280 families of Latino children with asthma. The study will also look at why the program may have an effect, and specifically whether the program impacts child coping, parent coping, or family asthma management behaviors. The main hypothesis is that the combined coping skills + asthma management program will improve asthma outcomes more than the standard asthma management program.
Within the AGAVE project (2010-2014), funded by the 2008 AIFA (Italian Medicines Agency) Call (contract No. FARM8YRYZC), a severe/uncontrolled asthma online Registry (RItA) was implemented to assess the appropriateness of therapeutic strategies for severe/uncontrolled asthma patients, according to GINA (Global Initiative for Asthma) guidelines, in epidemiological and clinical samples. The online RItA Registry is a database containing information on patients' general characteristics, medical history, clinical data, risk factors, comorbidity, asthma exacerbations, current asthma treatment. Currently, it contains information on severe/uncontrolled asthma subjects, enrolled at national level, performing baseline (n tot=1018) and follow-up interviews (n tot=402). Aim of the RISER study is to increase knowledge about the risk factors, diagnosis, and management of severe/uncontrolled asthma in general population and clinical setting through the update and follow-up of the RItA registry. The RISER study is an observational longitudinal study involving a clinical setting and an epidemiological one. The field survey will comprise one or two follow-ups according to the sample. 1. Observational longitudinal study in hospital specialist centres (clinical sample). Clinical cases of severe/uncontrolled asthma already included in the online RItA Registry and new clinical cases of severe/uncontrolled asthma attending the clinical centres and not yet included in the online RItA Registry, will be investigated at T0, T6 and T12 through a clinical form in order to collect information in accordance with the online RItA registry, and routine clinical/functional tests of asthma control. 2. Observational longitudinal study in a general population sample (epidemiological sample). Epidemiological cases of severe/uncontrolled asthma from Pisa cohort already inserted in the online RItA Registry and new epidemiological cases of severe/uncontrolled asthma from pre-existing Pisa cohort not yet included in the online RItA Registry will be investigated at T0 and T12 through a questionnaire to collect information for feeding the online RItA registry. Subjects fitting the epidemiological definition of severe/uncontrolled asthma will be invited at the Pisa clinical centre to have routine clinical/functional tests. All data collected from clinical/epidemiological centres will be included in the RItA registry. Overall, it is expected to enroll 422 patients.
The study will assess if regular use of tiotropium (i.e. daily) results in loss of bronchoprotection against methacholine induced bronchoconstriction in those with mild asthma.
To establish efficacy and safety of HDM sublingual Immunotherapy (HDM-SLIT) by comparing Odactra and placebo, when given sublingually for 3 years to high risk infants aged between 6 to 12 months at enrollment in preventing the development of asthma, assessed 1.5 years after discontinuation of treatment.
Inhaler nonadherence is a common problem that has been estimated to account for approximately 60% of all asthma-related hospitalizations. Unfortunately, prior interventions to improve inhaler nonadherence have shown a lack of long-term success. This study proposes to assess the problem of non-adherence using a D&I research lens while testing a new inhaler approach to potentially ameliorate the detrimental consequences of maintenance inhaler nonadherence.
This is a first in human (FIH) clinical study to evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of AZD8630 in healthy adults (Part A) and adult asthma patients on medium to high dose inhaled corticosteroids / Long-acting beta-agonists (Part B)