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Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease.

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NCT ID: NCT04252781 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Incident Chronic Obstructive pulmoNary dIsease Cohort Study (ICONIC)

ICONIC
Start date: February 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD), , secondary to smoking, is a major public health issue with very high direct and indirect costs. The impact on the health system of undiagnosed patients, up to 70% of patients, is increasingly documented. However, systematic spirometry screening remains controversial among smokers in the absence of data to link the detection of new patients with improved management and clinical events and health goals. More generally, there is little data on the evolution of patients in real life once they have entered the care system. The premise is that with systematic screening in general medicine, it is possible to identify the evolution of newly diagnosed COPD patients, to distinguish the different possible evolutions according to the initial phenotype and the management.

NCT ID: NCT04252235 Enrolling by invitation - COPD Clinical Trials

Home Air Purification for Eosinophilic COPD

Start date: March 15, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study evaluates the influence of home air purification on the lung health of adults with eosinophilic COPD. Half of the participants will receive real air purifiers (HEPA filters) and half will receive sham air purifiers.

NCT ID: NCT04249388 Completed - COPD Clinical Trials

Characteristics of People With Advanced Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) - A Multicenter Study

REPORT
Start date: February 1, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Pulmonary rehabilitation (PR) is a cornerstone of care for people with COPD. There is robust evidence that PR improves exercise capacity, enhances health-related quality of life (QoL) and reduces healthcare utilization. PR is strongly recommended in guidelines for COPD management. Despite the compelling evidence for its benefits, PR is delivered to less than 30% of people with COPD. Access is particularly challenging, an especially for those with the most progressed disease stages. We recently completed a randomized clinical trial, showing that approximately 1.100 patients annually are offered conventional hospital-based PR during routine consultations in the Capital Region of Denmark, but at least 700 patients declines participation. No major cohort studies have been published from people with severe and advanced COPD who opt out of traditional pulmonary rehabilitation. By establishing such cohort study, objective and qualitative knowledge from assessments and patient interviews is collected in patients we have very limited access to and knowledge of. Additionally, the collected data will give a deeper insight and understanding and possibly enable us to design new delivery models to be tested in proper study designs.

NCT ID: NCT04248842 Completed - Clinical trials for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Wireless Assessment of Respiratory and Circulatory Distress in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease - Validation Study

Start date: January 23, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

For patients admitted to the medical ward, it is often difficult to predict if their clinical condition will deteriorate, however subtle changes in vital signs are usually present 8 to 24 hours before a life-threatening event such as respiratory failure leading to ICU admission, or unanticipated cardiac arrest. Such adverse trends in clinical observations can be missed, misinterpreted or not appreciated as urgent. New continuous and wearable 27/7 clinical vital parameter monitoring systems offer a unique possibility to identify clinical deterioration before patients condition progress beyond the point-of-no-return, where adverse events are inevitable. As part of the WARD-COPD project, this validation study aim to assess the accuracy of physiologic parameters derived from standard and wireless patient monitors

NCT ID: NCT04246931 Active, not recruiting - COPD Clinical Trials

Adherence Evaluation in COPD

Start date: January 1, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The rationale of this study is to have a better understanding of the perception of the pulmonologists, general practitioners and patients of adherence (causes, main consequences, supportive tools,..) and the use of TAI-questionnaire (appreciation, usability,…) by interviewing pulmonologists & general practitioners and a survey with patients. Based on the outcome, projects and tools can be developed to help health care professionals to motivate patients to improve adherence and to help patients to increase their adherence to inhalation therapy.

NCT ID: NCT04242030 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

The Microcirculatory Characteristics of the Heart and Lung Meridians: A Study of COPD Patients and Healthy Adults

Start date: February 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Although some important progresses were made in the field of the meridian research, no breakthroughs have been achieved. Besides,there are some problems in meridian researches. The majority of the existing studies involve lots of subjective assessments for meridian phenomena. In addition, few studies have investigated the site specificity between two specific meridians.Therefore, this study is designed to detect the microcirculatory characteristics of meridian phenomena by using an objective assessment tool and investigate the site specificity for the meridian-visceral association and surface-surface association between two specific meridians.

NCT ID: NCT04241510 Completed - Clinical trials for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Effects of Kinesio Taping Techniques in COPD Patients

Start date: April 20, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Study will investigate effects of two different kinesio taping techniques on pulmonary parameters of patients with COPD.

NCT ID: NCT04240353 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

RECEIVER: Digital Service Model for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD)

Start date: August 1, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a serious but treatable chronic health condition. Optimised management improves symptoms, complications, quality of life and survival. Disease exacerbations, which have adverse outcomes and often trigger hospital admissions, underpin the rising costs of managing COPD (projected increase in the United Kingdom (UK) to £2.3bn by 2030). The costs and care-quality gap of COPD exacerbations, coupled with the global rising prevalence present a major healthcare challenge. This study proposal, which has been developed in partnership with patients, clinicians, enterprise and government representation is to conduct an implementation and effectiveness observational cohort study to establish a continuous and preventative digital health service model for COPD. The implementation proposals comprise: - - Establishing a digital resource for high-risk COPD patients which contains symptom diaries (structured patient reported outcome questionnaires), integrates physiology monitoring (FitBit and home NIV therapy data), enables asynchronous communication with clinical team, supports COPD self-management and tracks interaction with the service (for endpoint analyses). - Establishing a cloud-based clinical COPD dashboard which will integrate background electronic health record data, core COPD clinical dataset, patient-reported outcomes, physiology and therapy data and patient messaging to provide clinical decision support and practice-efficiencies, enhancing delivery of guideline-based COPD care. - Use the acquired dataset to explore feasibility and accuracy of machine-learned predictive modelling risk scores, via cloud-based infrastructure, which will be for future prospective clinical trial. Our primary endpoint for the effectiveness evaluation is number of patients screened and recruited who successfully utilise and engage with this RECEIVER clinical service. The implementation components of the project will be iterated during the study, based on patient and clinical user experience and engagement. Secondary endpoints include a number of specified clinical outcomes, clinical service outcomes, machine-learning supported exploratory analyses, patient-centred outcomes and healthcare cost analyses.

NCT ID: NCT04238221 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Effect of add-on Doxofylline on Lung Function in Stable COPD

EDAI
Start date: September 1, 2020
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

It is a phase IV, prospective, interventional, single blind, randomized, crossover trial in which the investigators will evaluate the effects of a 4-week treatment with doxofylline 400 mg bid, in add-on to maximal inhalation therapy, in clinically stable COPD patients.

NCT ID: NCT04236726 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Investigating Health Related Quality of Life in Patients With Chronic Respiratory Failure

CRF-QoL
Start date: December 19, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

To determine the quality of life of patients living with chronic respiratory failure and the impact interventions have on it.