View clinical trials related to Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease.
Filter by:There is lack of quality control and evaluation indexes for standard COPD management in hospitals in China, leading to nonstandard in COPD management and discrepancy in therapeutic efficiency. This study focuses on establishing quality control and evaluation indexes for standard COPD management in hospitals in China, and evaluating the therapeutic efficiency after standard COPD management. This part is a prospective cohort which lasts 2 years. After standard COPD management according to GOLD 2017 by doctors in hospitals in China, patients will be followed up for their outcome after 1 year. Several indexes will be selected to evaluate the quality control of standard COPD management and its efficiency. The controls are from hospital-based subjects with a retrospective cohort study.
Study to Assess the Safety and Tolerability of PT010, PT009 and PT003 in Subjects with Moderate to Very Severe Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. Pulmonary rehabilitation effectively improves outcomes in patients with chronic respiratory disease. There is a link between training intensity and physiological improvements following pulmonary rehabilitation. However, high intensity training is not sustainable for every patients. Therefore, actual strategies for pulmonary rehabilitation aimed at decreasing dyspnea to improve muscle work. Electrical muscle stimulation is widely used during rehabilitation to promote muscle function recovery. Transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation was recently used to relief dyspnea and improve pulmonary function in patients with chronic respiratory disease. Moreover, spinal anesthesia with fentanyl has been shown to be effective in improving exercise tolerance in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (inhibiting group III and IV muscle afferents). As transcutaneous electrical muscle stimulation stimulates the same receptors in the spinal cord dorsal horn as fentanyl, it is hypothesized that it could also improve exercise capacity. Therefore, the aim of this study is to assess wether transcutaneous electrical stimulation (high or low frequency) is effective in improving exercise capacity in patients with severe to very severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
Randomized, Open-label, Single-dose, Single-center, Crossover Study in Healthy Subjects to Assess the Relative Bioavailability of PT010
Despite the high prevalence of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), there continues to be a large gap in our understanding of disease pathogenesis and mechanisms accounting for large variability in disease phenotype. Untargeted metabolomics is an ideal approach to uncover the metabolic basis of disease, as well as discover unique drug target opportunities aimed at these nodal metabolic drivers of disease. There are very limited data from metabolomics studies from plasma/serum and exhaled breath condensate that suggest certain metabolic pathways or metabolites might predict the presence and/or severity of COPD phenotypes. Here, the investigators hope to generate comprehensive, compartment specific (blood and lung) metabolite profiles that will be correlated with various clinical phenotypes of COPD, using a complementary approach of untargeted nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and liquid chromatography (LC)- mass spectroscopy (MS) -based metabolomics.
Increasing evidence have implied that microbiota from airway and gut might be involved in the pathogenesis of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). However, the cross-talk between respiratory and gastrointestinal microbiome in COPD is still undetermined. The study is aimed to investigate the interaction between lung and gut flora, and their role in the process of COPD.
This is an observational pilot study focused on collecting data on clinical variables that can improve the understanding of potential predictors of disease exacerbation and readmissions in COPD patients. The study aim is to understand how the variability of clinical parameters (respiratory rate, forced expiratory volume in one second, and oxygen saturation), physical activity and quality of life is associated with the risk of exacerbation in COPD patients.
Comparison of a conventional non-invasive ventilation to a non-invasive pursed-lip breathing ventilation (PLBV) ventilation in advanced COPD
The present non-interventional observational study in the Greek population aims at collecting the characteristics of COPD patients selected to be given the inhaled combination of fluticasone propionate and salmeterol in doses of 100 μg mcg (250 μg) mcg (500 g) mcg through the Elpenhaler® device, to investigate (a) the effectiveness of the treatment for compliance and the quality of life of the patients; and (b) the safety of the drugs in patients whose disease is treated either in a hospital or in a private physician.
Pulmonary rehabilitation effectively improves outcomes in patients with chronic respiratory disease, however there is a lack of pulmonary rehabilitation centers. Telehealth technology is one solution to deliver supervised home-based rehabilitation (tele-rehabilitation). However, the feasibility and the acceptability of using telehealth technology to deliver tele-rehabilitation has not been assessed in a large scale multicenter study. Therefore, the aim of this study is to assess the feasibility and the acceptability of telemonitoring system during pulmonary rehabilitation in patients with chronic respiratory disease.