Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Approximately 330 million people in the world are living with asthma and 3-10% of them has difficult asthma that is challenging to control even with maximum doses of pharmacological treatment. In the last five years our multidisciplinary team has shown the clinical benefits of a short-term structured exercise programme for people living with difficult asthma (PDA) (1). However, engaging PDA in self-maintained exercise long-term and outside of the hospital environment remains a challenge. Changing and maintaining behaviours requires complex psychological and cognitive processes and appropriate modes of support by skilled practitioners. Underpinned by behavioural science and health psychology principles, our team has developed a world renown multimodal self-management support intervention for people living with cancer (2). The intervention focuses on initiating and maintaining exercise, optimising diet and includes supporting people through the cognitive and psychological processes to change their behaviour. We aim to adapt this intervention for PDA to optimise their self-management via the LIBERTY study. To achieve the best outcomes, prior to commencing the LIBERTY study, we aim to develop the intervention using the acclaimed Person-Based Approach (PBA) (3). This methodology is considered gold standard in behaviour change intervention development, implementation and evaluation and maximise the probability of the uptake and maintenance of the desired behaviour.


Clinical Trial Description

The burden of poor asthma control remains high in the United Kingdom (UK). Given high asthma prevalence, poor asthma control exerts significant impact at individual and societal levels and accounts for one fifth of the total chronic respiratory disability-adjusted life year burden (4). 'Remission' or well-controlled asthma requires continuation of regular medical treatment, sustained adherence to medications and other self-management behaviours (e.g. healthy diet, avoiding triggers, physical activity), and exposure to risk of potential medication side effects with plus ongoing financial implications. 3-10% of people living with asthma has difficult asthma, defined as asthma that is uncontrolled despite GINA (Global Initiative for Asthma) Step 4 or 5 treatment (5) or requires such treatment to maintain good control and reduce exacerbations. It is increasingly recognised that problematic difficult asthma is a multidimensional state comprising numerous treatable traits that merit targeted approaches (6). This multimorbid disease framework (defined as the coexistence of >2 health conditions) is particularly prevalent in difficult asthma and represents a complex constellation of conditions that collectively impose a significant burden on the patient (7) These treatable traits can be pulmonary, extrapulmonary and behavioural (7). Treatable traits, including obesity, anxiety and depression, dysfunctional breathing and inactivity predict future exacerbation risk in difficult asthma, and so addressing these should be a key part of asthma management for both individual patient benefit and health economic reasons (8). Multimodal non-pharmacological approaches are needed to do that but there is limited understanding of their role in difficult asthma to guide their use. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT06159803
Study type Observational
Source University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust
Contact Anna Freeman
Phone 02381206397
Email a.freeman@soton.ac.uk
Status Recruiting
Phase
Start date April 19, 2024
Completion date November 1, 2025

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT04624425 - Additional Effects of Segmental Breathing In Asthma N/A
Terminated NCT04410523 - Study of Efficacy and Safety of CSJ117 in Patients With Severe Uncontrolled Asthma Phase 2
Active, not recruiting NCT03927820 - A Pharmacist-Led Intervention to Increase Inhaler Access and Reduce Hospital Readmissions (PILLAR) N/A
Completed NCT04617015 - Defining and Treating Depression-related Asthma Early Phase 1
Recruiting NCT03694158 - Investigating Dupilumab's Effect in Asthma by Genotype Phase 4
Terminated NCT04946318 - Study of Safety of CSJ117 in Participants With Moderate to Severe Uncontrolled Asthma Phase 2
Completed NCT04450108 - Vivatmo Pro™ for Fractional Exhaled Nitric Oxide (FeNO) Monitoring in U.S. Asthmatic Patients N/A
Completed NCT03086460 - A Dose Ranging Study With CHF 1531 in Subjects With Asthma (FLASH) Phase 2
Completed NCT01160224 - Oral GW766944 (Oral CCR3 Antagonist) Phase 2
Completed NCT03186209 - Efficacy and Safety Study of Benralizumab in Patients With Uncontrolled Asthma on Medium to High Dose Inhaled Corticosteroid Plus LABA (MIRACLE) Phase 3
Completed NCT02502734 - Effect of Inhaled Fluticasone Furoate on Short-term Growth in Paediatric Subjects With Asthma Phase 3
Completed NCT01715844 - L-Citrulline Supplementation Pilot Study for Overweight Late Onset Asthmatics Phase 1
Terminated NCT04993443 - First-In-Human Study to Evaluate the Safety, Tolerability, Immunogenicity, and Pharmacokinetics of LQ036 Phase 1
Completed NCT02787863 - Clinical and Immunological Efficiency of Bacterial Vaccines at Adult Patients With Bronchopulmonary Pathology Phase 4
Recruiting NCT06033833 - Long-term Safety and Efficacy Evaluation of Subcutaneous Amlitelimab in Adult Participants With Moderate-to-severe Asthma Who Completed Treatment Period of Previous Amlitelimab Asthma Clinical Study Phase 2
Completed NCT03257995 - Pharmacodynamics, Safety, Tolerability, and Pharmacokinetics of Two Orally Inhaled Indacaterol Salts in Adult Subjects With Asthma. Phase 2
Completed NCT02212483 - Clinical Effectiveness and Economical Impact of Medical Indoor Environment Counselors Visiting Homes of Asthma Patients N/A
Recruiting NCT04872309 - MUlti-nuclear MR Imaging Investigation of Respiratory Disease-associated CHanges in Lung Physiology
Withdrawn NCT01468805 - Childhood Asthma Reduction Study N/A
Recruiting NCT05145894 - Differentiation of Asthma/COPD Exacerbation and Stable State Using Automated Lung Sound Analysis With LungPass Device