Primary Ciliary Dyskinesia Clinical Trial
Official title:
PRospective Observational Multicentre Study on VAriability of Lung Function in Stable PCD Patients
Using routinely collected clinical data, this study aims to quantify intra-individual (i.e. in the same individual) variations between measurements of lung function in stable patients with primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD), a rare genetic disease that causes lung damage.
Background
Lung function measurements are commonly used in PCD to monitor disease progression.
Spirometry measurements are taken every 3 months and results are compared to established
references, adjusted for age, height and ethnicity. Results are also compared to previous
measurements from the same patient at earlier appointments. However, little is understood of
the impact of intra-individual variability and the extent of spontaneous variations in these
comparisons.
One of the priorities for respiratory research in the UK is to understand factors involved in
determining different outcomes for lung function.[1] The precision of measurements done on
the same individual conducted by different people, in different settings and using different
equipment is not entirely known. Importantly, previous studies in healthy children assessing
intra-individual variability have shown variations of up to 1.2 z-scores in spirometry
parameters over the course of 1 year.[2] Within test-variability and daily repeatability can
range from 2 to10% FEV% predicted in young healthy children.[3],[4]
In PCD, deterioration of lung function does not follow a pre-defined pattern.[5] However,
none of the published studies on lung function in PCD to date have taken into consideration
the imprecision of individual and repeated measurements on the same individual over time.
Personal experience and unpublished small retrospective assessments suggest that there is
considerable variability.
Key research question
Quantify intra-individual (i.e. in the same individual) variations between measurements of
lung function in stable patients with primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD), a rare genetic
disease that causes lung damage.
Study design
Prospective multicentre cohort study using routinely collected clinical data to evaluate
natural variability of lung function measurements in stable PCD patients.
The primary end-point is to assess intra-individual variations between repeated measures of
lung function parameters. Secondary end-points include: a) Inter-individual variations
between repeated measures of lung function parameters and correlations with baseline
measures; b) intra- and inter-individual variation between repeated measures of lung function
parameters during exacerbation.
Participants will be approached by their clinicians and asked to sign a consent form to allow
for their anonymised routinely collected clinical data to be entered into the study. Routine
clinical data will be collected at PCD follow-up clinics in participating centres. These data
are already collected for clinical purposes and will be anonymised locally. Non-identifiable
data will be entered into the study database by a member of the clinical team of the
participating centre. The study coordinating centre (University of Southampton) will only
have access to the anonymised dataset.
The data collection period will last 18 months (6 months for patients recruitment and 12
months for patient follow-up).
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