Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive Clinical Trial
— PACEOfficial title:
A 24 Week Study to Evaluate the Predictive Ability of the COPD Assessment Test (CAT) for Acute Exacerbations (PACE) in Patients With Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
Verified date | August 2016 |
Source | GlaxoSmithKline |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | Korea: Institutional Review Board |
Study type | Observational |
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) is a major health concern, with a substantial
impact on a patient's life. However, the impact of COPD is currently under-recognised and,
as a result, COPD is under-treated. An exacerbation of COPD is a major element that causes
poor quality of life and loss of productivity. Therefore, minimizing the frequency of
exacerbations is a short term treatment goal in COPD management and could improve Quality of
Life (QoL) significantly in all severity groups of COPD.
Although the use of spirometry for the determination of disease severity in COPD is
supported by guidelines, a lung function test alone does not provide a measurement of the
overall impact of COPD on health status and is not generally available especially in primary
care centre. Therefore, a standardised and effective dialogue between patients and
physicians in a consultation could address the impact of COPD on a patient's QoL in this
situation.
The COPD Assessment Test (CAT), recently launched in 2009, is a short and simple,
self-administered questionnaire designed to assess the condition of patients and overall
impact of COPD, and to improve patient-physician communication. It has been proven that the
CAT has good repeatability and discriminative properties which suggest that it is sensitive
to treatment effects at a group level. The CAT score with its better ability to assess the
impact of COPD on patients, suggests potential to predict a significant change in COPD
status such as acute exacerbations of COPD.
Since the CAT is designed to assess the impact of COPD on the patient by measuring overall
impairment, it has better correlations with other instruments, such as the Clinical COPD
Questionnaire (CCQ), MRC (Medical Research Council) dyspnoea scale, St George's Respiratory
Questionnaire (SGRQ),and the 6-minute walk test. However, it does not correlate well with
FEV1 (Forced Expiratory Volume in One Second).
While the CAT shares some similarities with other questionnaires, there are several
important differences. For example, the SGRQ is substantially longer than the CAT, is
complex to administer and requires the use of a computer for scoring. The CAT is designed to
provide a holistic measure of the impact of COPD on the patient, whereas the MRC dyspnoea
scale only measures dyspnoea, and the CCQ only assesses clinical disease control. Thus, the
CAT is the only validated, short and simple assessment test which can provide a holistic
measure of the impact of COPD on patients, ensuring both the physicians and the patients
gain the understanding needed to manage COPD optimally.
QoL is defined as an individual's perception of their position in their life in the context
of the culture and value systems. Therefore, the extent of understanding of the
questionnaire might be influenced by language and ethnicities. Since the validation findings
so far have been based on data from the US and Europe, PACE may provide better quality of
data across ethnic groups given that mainly Asian subjects will participate in this study.
PACE is designed to evaluate whether the CAT has a high predictive value in detecting
subsequent exacerbations of COPD. If so, this result might enable both patients and
physicians to better target and optimise management. The primary objective is to evaluate
the predictability of the CAT to have subsequent exacerbations in COPD patients. Secondary
objectives are to evaluate the predictability of the CAT to have moderate to severe
exacerbations or time to the first exacerbation, to identify risk predictors for COPD
exacerbations, and to evaluate correlations between CAT scores and FEV1 values, or MRC
dyspnea scores. An experimental objective is to evaluate the correlation between the CAT
score between 2 consecutive follow-ups (e.g. Week 8 & baseline, Week 16 & Week 8) and a COPD
exacerbation over the following treatment period adjusting for demographics, MRC scores,
lung function parameters, medical history, and therapy history.
PACE is a multicentre, prospective, observational study designed to evaluate the
predictability of the CAT score to have COPD exacerbations over 24 weeks. During the study,
subjects continue taking their regular prescribed treatment. Investigators are free to make
medication adjustments where required. Eligible subjects will have a clinic visit every 8
weeks, during which they will complete the CAT questionnaire, the Exacerbation Check List
(ECL), MRC dyspnea scale, and spirometry. A regular phone call is placed every 8 weeks in
between clinic visits to collect data for the ECL.There is no follow-up period.
550 male and female outpatient subjects will be recruited for PACE to obtain approximately
300 exacerbation events. This study will capture the winter periods in Australia, China,
Korea and Taiwan, when incidence of exacerbations is at its peak.
Statistical analysis will be performed on subjects' data to derive the PACE end-points.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 70 |
Est. completion date | November 2011 |
Est. primary completion date | November 2011 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | Both |
Age group | 40 Years and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: 1. Type of subject: Outpatients 2. Informed consent: Subjects must give their signed and dated written informed consent to participate. 3. Gender: Male or Female 4. Age: 40 years of age or older at Visit 1 5. COPD diagnosis: Documented diagnosis of COPD at least 6 months prior to Visit 1 in accordance with the following definition by the GOLD (Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease) guideline: Post bronchodilator FEV1/FVC < 0.7. 6. History of exacerbations: At least one COPD exacerbation which required the use of any additional treatment in the last 12 months prior to Visit 1. For subjects who were diagnosed between 6 to 12 months prior to Visit 1, they should have at least one COPD exacerbation that required the use of any additional treatment since diagnosis. 7. Tobacco use: Smokers or ex-smokers with a smoking history of more than 10 pack years. Exclusion Criteria: 1. Pregnancy: Women who are pregnant or lactating or are planning on becoming pregnant during the study 2. Asthma: Subjects with a current diagnosis of asthma. Subjects with a prior history of asthma are eligible if COPD is the current diagnosis. 3. Non-compliance: Subjects unable to comply with any aspect of this study protocol or scheduled visits to the study centre |
Time Perspective: Prospective
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Australia | GSK Investigational Site | Bedford Park | South Australia |
Australia | GSK Investigational Site | Concord | New South Wales |
Australia | GSK Investigational Site | Woolloongabba | Queensland |
China | GSK Investigational Site | Beijing | |
China | GSK Investigational Site | Chongqing | |
China | GSK Investigational Site | Guangzhou | Guangdong |
China | GSK Investigational Site | Shanghai | |
China | GSK Investigational Site | Shenyang | Liaoning |
China | GSK Investigational Site | Suzhou | Jiangsu |
China | GSK Investigational Site | Wuhan | Hubei |
Korea, Republic of | GSK Investigational Site | Seoul | |
Korea, Republic of | GSK Investigational Site | Seoul | |
Korea, Republic of | GSK Investigational Site | Seoul | |
Korea, Republic of | GSK Investigational Site | Seoul | |
Korea, Republic of | GSK Investigational Site | Seoul | |
Taiwan | GSK Investigational Site | Changhua | |
Taiwan | GSK Investigational Site | Kaohsiung | |
Taiwan | GSK Investigational Site | Taichung | |
Taiwan | GSK Investigational Site | Taipei City |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
GlaxoSmithKline |
Australia, China, Korea, Republic of, Taiwan,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Incidence of COPD exacerbations over 24 weeks according to the baseline CAT quartiles | 24 weeks | No | |
Secondary | Incidence of moderate to severe COPD exacerbations over 24 weeks according to the baseline CAT quartiles | 24 weeks | No | |
Secondary | Time to the first exacerbation according to the baseline CAT quartiles | No | ||
Secondary | Risk predictors for Incidence of COPD exacerbations over 24 weeks using CAT scores, demographics, MRC scores, lung function parameters, medical history, and therapy history | 24 weeks | No | |
Secondary | Correlation between the CAT scores and FEV1 values | No | ||
Secondary | Correlation between the CAT scores and MRC dyspnea scores | No |
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