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Severe Asthma clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT06283290 Recruiting - Severe Asthma Clinical Trials

PROPE Severe Asthma Study in Egypt

Start date: March 12, 2024
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Asthma is a syndrome characterized by airway inflammation, reversible airway obstruction, and airway hyper-responsiveness. Patients present clinically with recurrent wheezing, shortness of breath, cough, and chest tightness. Asthma is a leading cause of morbidity with a global prevalence of approximately 300 million; it is estimated that the number of people with asthma may increase to 400 to 450 million people worldwide by 2025. Severe asthma is not considered a single disease; instead, it is divided into several phenotypes, owing to the variety of inflammatory, clinical, and functional characteristics that it can present with. One of the proposed and most studied phenotypes is severe eosinophilic asthma. Patients with severe asthma that is accompanied by a high concentration of eosinophils require greater healthcare resource use, greater disease management costs, and a much more impaired QoL than those who do not present with raised eosinophilia. While the number of targeted treatments for asthma management has been growing in recent years, the heterogeneity of clinical presentations, treatment responses, and inflammatory processes involved represent an added challenge for health care professionals. Thus, severe asthma management is a complex endeavor, and a thorough and up-to-date understanding of the pathophysiologic characteristics of the patient population promotes effective therapeutic decision-making. This cross-sectional, multicenter study aims to determine the prevalence of oral corticosteroid (OCS) use among severe asthma patients who attend to different sites specialized in the management of severe asthma across Egypt. In addition, the prevalence of eosinophilic phenotype of blood eosinophil count ≥ 150 cells/mm3, prevalence of atopic phenotype, and asthma control will also be studied.

NCT ID: NCT06196879 Recruiting - Severe Asthma Clinical Trials

A Study to Investigate the Efficacy and Safety of Verekitug (UPB-101) in Adult Participants With Severe Asthma (VALIANT)

Start date: February 27, 2024
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of verekitug (UPB-101) in participants with severe asthma. The study will evaluate the incidence of asthma exacerbations, other pharmacodynamic (PD) parameters such as lung function and asthma control, and the safety and tolerability of verekitug (UPB-101) compared to placebo.

NCT ID: NCT06126692 Recruiting - Severe Asthma Clinical Trials

3TR Asthma Biologics Cohort (ABC) Study

3TR-ABC
Start date: January 10, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The 3TR-ABC study is a multicentre observational prospective cohort study platform that follows patients with severe asthma from the start of biological therapy and three years onwards. In the 3TR-ABC platform, individual studies are conducted on specific biologics, using aligned study designs. The aim of the study is to assess response to treatment and examine clinical characteristics, biomarkers, and immunological mechanisms related to response, including remission and non-response, that might be new targets or explanations for insufficient treatment. Patients will be extensively characterized at baseline and then followed throughout the years with formal clinical and biological assessment at 4, 16, 52 weeks, and 2, 3 years. Based on the response to treatment, patients will be stratified into remission, clinical responders, and non-responders, and pre-treatment biomarker profiles obtained at the baseline visit will be compared, as well as the immunological response to treatment. Healthy individuals and patients with mild/moderate controlled asthma are included as reference groups and will undergo the same baseline visit as patients with severe asthma. Several bio-samples, to perform multi-omic analysis, will be taken to examine biological pathways associated with response and non-response to biologics.

NCT ID: NCT06035289 Recruiting - Severe Asthma Clinical Trials

Register Schweres Asthma - German Asthma Net e.V.

Start date: November 1, 2011
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

The German Asthma Net e.V. focusses on science and research in patients with severe asthma. This includes, in particular, the optimization of medical care and treatment for patients with severe asthma as well as the elucidation and information. An unavoidable basis for a better understanding of severe asthma is the registration and comprehensive characterization of a large patient population. To date, there are only few reliable data on incidence, prevalence, phenotypes and treatment of patients with severe asthma. For this reason, the German Asthma Net e.V. was established in December 2011 as a clinical registry for patients with severe asthma, initially set up on a national basis.

NCT ID: NCT05946421 Recruiting - Severe Asthma Clinical Trials

The BASA Study: Breath Analysis for Severe Asthma Patients

Start date: July 4, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study will evaluate the fluctuations of exhaled breath markers in patients with severe asthma on biologics. In the study, severe asthma patients will be followed up to 16 weeks monitoring lung function and inflammation through non-invasive technologies such as exhaled breath analysis (FeNO, GC-MS and EBC). A control group will be followed up to two weeks with the overall objective to indentify and evaluate the modifcations of markers of inflammation in patient under biologic treatment.

NCT ID: NCT05472324 Recruiting - Severe Asthma Clinical Trials

Evaluate the Efficacy and Safety of TQC2731 Injection in Patients With Severe Asthma.

Start date: September 23, 2022
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This is a phase II, multicenter, double-blind, randomized, parallel group, placebo-controlled clinical study to evaluate the effect of three doses of TQC2731 on Annualized Asthma Exacerbation Rates(AAER) in adult subjects with poor control of severe asthma. It is estimated that 220 subjects will be included. The subjects will receive TQC2731 (70 mg Q4w, 210 mg Q4w, 420 mg Q4w) or placebo (Q4w) administered by Subcutaneous (SC) in the ratio of 1:1:1:1. The study comprised a 5 to 6-week screening period, a 52-week treatment period and a 12-week follow-up period. During the treatment period, the study drug will be administered from day 0 until week 48. The study drug was not administered at the 52nd week.

NCT ID: NCT05164939 Recruiting - Severe Asthma Clinical Trials

Precision Medicine Intervention in Severe Asthma (PRISM) Study

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

The Korea-UK Precision Medicine Intervention in Severe Asthma (PRISM) study aims to identify molecular phenotypes of severe asthma by analyzing multi-omics data including genomics, epigenomics, transcriptomics, proteomics, metagenomics, and metabolomics.

NCT ID: NCT05032209 Recruiting - Severe Asthma Clinical Trials

Follow-up of Children With Severe Asthma at Adult Age

S2AEA
Start date: July 12, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Most of clinical cohorts focused on the course of asthma over time and on the different phenotypes of asthma have investigated children and adults separately. The passage from childhood to adulthood is scarcely explored. In this context, we decided to explore the course of asthma severity from teenage to adulthood in children with severe asthma. The secondary objectives are to assess the quality of life and socioeconomic status in adulthood. This study will be both retrospective (data collected during childhood) and prospective (data collected during adulthood), multicentric and observational

NCT ID: NCT05018299 Recruiting - Severe Asthma Clinical Trials

Evaluate the Efficacy and Safety of FB704A in Adult With Severe Asthma

Start date: September 30, 2021
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This is a randomized, placebo controlled and double blind study to evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics, and clinical activity of FB704A in adult patients with severe asthma. The study comprised a 4-week screening period, a 8-week treatment period and a 12-week follow-up period.

NCT ID: NCT05001529 Recruiting - Severe Asthma Clinical Trials

Flow Cytometry Analysis of Eosinophils in Severe Asthma Patients.

Start date: March 18, 2021
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Asthma is a heterogeneous disease, characterized by reversible airflow obstruction, airway hyperresponsiveness, and airway inflammation, in which 40% of patients exhibit eosinophil-driven pathobiology.The main treatment of asthma is the use of corticosteroid, whose use induces a reduction in eosinophils that is considered a strong predictor of response to treatment. Corticosteroids have remained the mainstay treatment of asthma and reduction in eosinophils has remained the unequivocal predictor of steroid response. The prevalence of asthma, which is expected to increase, it is about 300 million people worldwide. About 5-10% of asthma patients have severe disease, which is defined as asthma that requires high-dose inhaled corticosteroids (ICSs) plus a second controller to prevent it from becoming "uncontrolled" or which remains "uncontrolled" despite this therapy. Patients with severe disease have worse quality of life, and disproportionately high morbidity, mortality, and use of health care resources when compared with their peers with well-controlled disease.The pathophysiology of asthma is complex and heterogeneous between patients, as the disease itself; however, on the basis of immune system involvement, it is possible to define 2 subtypes - or endotypes- of asthma. These endotypes are named T2 (for type 2 cells) high or low, and are defined by the levels of expression of the T2 cytokines, IL-4, IL-5, and IL-13 produced by T helper 2 lymphocytes, and innate lymphoid cell-2.T2 high endotype patients display an increase in the number of blood and sputum eosinophils, and have a better response to the current available biological therapies , such as the administration of mepolizumab (anti IL-5 antibody). Eosinophilic asthma is associated to a more severe clinical phenotype,but patients with a T2 endotype respond better to biological therapies. The hypothesis of the present proposal is that the activation status of these cells, analyzed by the expression of activation markers, can be used to define a new, different, endotype, in which eosinophils, although quantitatively low or normal, are qualitatively more active and aggressive, and could therefore act as an indicator of the progression toward a T2 high endotype.Moreover, the investigators will verify whether a different expression of these molecules on eosinophil's surface might be associated with different clinical response to biologic medications.