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Asthma clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Asthma.

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NCT ID: NCT06136091 Recruiting - Asthma Clinical Trials

Protocol CAUSE-03 / CHEETAH

CHEETAH
Start date: April 23, 2024
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This is a one-year longitudinal, observational study of 250 urban children and adolescents with asthma and 60 without asthma, ages 6-17 years old. Participants with asthma will require daily controller therapy with inhaled corticosteroids ICS (at least Step 2 therapy). Those without asthma cannot have used asthma medications in the year prior to enrollment and cannot demonstrate bronchodilator reversibility at baseline. Phenotypic characteristics will be established at baseline, and the participants will be seen at scheduled visits over 12 months. Each participant will be asked to monitor and self-report cold symptoms and will be asked to complete up to three cold visits

NCT ID: NCT06126692 Recruiting - Severe Asthma Clinical Trials

3TR Asthma Biologics Cohort (ABC) Study

3TR-ABC
Start date: January 10, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The 3TR-ABC study is a multicentre observational prospective cohort study platform that follows patients with severe asthma from the start of biological therapy and three years onwards. In the 3TR-ABC platform, individual studies are conducted on specific biologics, using aligned study designs. The aim of the study is to assess response to treatment and examine clinical characteristics, biomarkers, and immunological mechanisms related to response, including remission and non-response, that might be new targets or explanations for insufficient treatment. Patients will be extensively characterized at baseline and then followed throughout the years with formal clinical and biological assessment at 4, 16, 52 weeks, and 2, 3 years. Based on the response to treatment, patients will be stratified into remission, clinical responders, and non-responders, and pre-treatment biomarker profiles obtained at the baseline visit will be compared, as well as the immunological response to treatment. Healthy individuals and patients with mild/moderate controlled asthma are included as reference groups and will undergo the same baseline visit as patients with severe asthma. Several bio-samples, to perform multi-omic analysis, will be taken to examine biological pathways associated with response and non-response to biologics.

NCT ID: NCT06112080 Recruiting - Asthma Clinical Trials

Wearable Auscultation Device Validation in Children

Start date: August 7, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This observational clinical study is an evaluation of a diagnostic tool through comparison. Similar to a validation study, the output of the RESP device will be compared to physician auscultation, surrogated by having an attending pulmonologist listen to blinded recordings.

NCT ID: NCT06108908 Recruiting - Asthma Clinical Trials

Influence of Inhaler Compliance on the Treatment of Asthma Patients

Start date: August 14, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The major goal of "Influence of Inhaler Compliance on the Treatment of Asthma Patients" is to explore compliance rate outcome in adult asthmatic patients (20-80 years old) with mild to moderate persistent asthma according to American Thoracic Society (ATS) definition and diagnosis. The major endpoints include: 1. To increase the adherence rate of treatment by reminder intervention with correctly monitor patients' adherence rate by Asthma Supportive Kits 2. Eventually achieve best asthma care and management. All participants will use Asthma Supportive Kits for 24 weeks and return visit on week 5, 12, 24. Based on collected data, the study compares intervention and control group to see if active reminder intervention may effectively alter compliance rate, and corresponding outcomes, e.g., asthma control status, acute exacerbation events.

NCT ID: NCT06106646 Recruiting - Asthma Clinical Trials

Vitamin C to Decrease Effects of Smoking in Pregnancy on Infant Lung Function (VCSIP) Longer Term Follow Up

VCSIP
Start date: October 11, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The overall aims of this protocol are to determine whether prenatal supplementation with vitamin C to pregnant smokers can improve pulmonary function at 10 years of age in their offspring. This is an additional continuation of the Vitamin C to Decrease Effects of Smoking in Pregnancy on Infant Lung Function (VCSIP) trial, to follow the offspring through 10 years of age. The hypothesis for this protocol is an extension of the VCSIP trial that supplemental vitamin C in pregnant smokers can significantly improve their children's airway function tests. The investigators aim to demonstrate sustained improvement in airway/pulmonary function and trajectory through 10 years of age.

NCT ID: NCT06102005 Recruiting - Asthma Clinical Trials

Dose Ranging Study of Lunsekimig Compared With Placebo-control in Adult Participants With Moderate-to-severe Asthma

AIRCULES
Start date: October 16, 2023
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This is a Phase 2b, global, multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel group, dose ranging study to assess the efficacy, safety, and tolerability of add-on therapy with SC lunsekimig in adult participants aged 18 to 80 years, (inclusive) with moderate-to-severe asthma.

NCT ID: NCT06100042 Recruiting - Asthma Clinical Trials

Observational Study on Therapy Pathways of Asthamics Treated With ICS/LABA/LAMA Therapy in a Real-world Setting

TRIMAXIMIZE
Start date: April 24, 2024
Phase:
Study type: Observational

TriMaximize is a non-interventional study aimed to collect prospective data from asthmatic patients under routine care, for whom their treating physician has decided to prescribe BDP/FF/G (beclomethasone/formoterol/glycopyrronium).

NCT ID: NCT06099145 Recruiting - Asthma COPD Clinical Trials

Clinical and Medico-economic Validation of the HEPHAI Solution.

VAL-HEPHAI
Start date: September 19, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

In a context where the use of inhalation devices for respiratory medications is associated with a high frequency of critical errors, our primary hypothesis is that the use of the HEPHAÏ solution reduces this frequency compared to standard care. The objective of this clinical study is to evaluate the performance of the HEPHAÏ solution as a tool for improving the administration of inhaled treatments in patients undergoing pulmonary care for asthma and/or COPD, who are receiving treatment with Innovair® or Trimbow®. These two inhalers were chosen for reasons of feasibility and compatibility with the version of the HEPHAÏ software provided as part of the clinical investigation

NCT ID: NCT06097507 Recruiting - Asthma Clinical Trials

Patient Perspective on Climate Impact of Inhalers

Start date: November 7, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The effects of climate change on population health have considerably increased as the planet warms and is thus subjected to more heat waves, extreme weather events and food insecurity. Paradoxically, healthcare systems are major contributors to carbon emissions. Within the field of respirology, choice of inhaler is a low-hanging fruit to address this issue. Metered dose inhalers (MDI) contain potent greenhouse gases and have been shown to have a significantly larger carbon footprint than dry powder inhalers (DPI). The goal of the study is to assess asthma patients' willingness to change inhalers for environmental reasons as well as prescribers' willingness to prescribe a different inhaler for environmental reasons at the patient's request. The study will also be assessing patient awareness of the climate impact of inhalers and the importance that they attribute to this issue as well as other issues (cost and ease of use).

NCT ID: NCT06072287 Recruiting - Obesity Clinical Trials

The Living With a Long-Term Condition Study

LTC
Start date: June 28, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Psychological distress (anxiety and depression) is common in and experienced differently by people living with long-term health conditions (LTCs). Being able to measure whether psychological distress is related to living with a LTC would allow researchers and clinicians to provide interventions specifically tailored to the challenges of living with a LTC and therefore provide the most appropriate support for these patients. Such a measure would also be useful in research to identify the presence of illness-related distress in different patient groups. This project will therefore create a new measure of illness-related distress that has applications for both research and clinical practice. This will involve the psychometric validation of the new illness-related distress measure to test how valid and reliable the measure is. The aim of the project is to provide initial validation of the Illness Related Distress Scale in a community sample, recruited through online platforms. The objective of the study is to gather initial validity and reliability data for the scale.