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Severe Asthma clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT04022447 Completed - Severe Asthma Clinical Trials

Dupilumab for Severe Asthma in a Real Life Setting

DUPI-France
Start date: August 10, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Dupilumab is a monoclonal anti-IL-4/13Rα antibody developed for severe asthma (SA). In France, mepolizumab was commercialized in February 2018. Before this date, many SA patients had reached a therapeutic dead end, with uncontrolled disease despite maximal available treatment. Upon the request of lung specialists involved in SA, French health authorities approved an early access program (temporary Use Authorization) allowing early access to dupilumab (before EMA's decision) from September 2017 to January 2018, for SA patients demonstrating unacceptable steroids side effects and/or life-threatening exacerbations, irrespective of their T2 status.The aim of this retrospective study was to describe the characteristics of SA patients included in the early access program and to assess changes in asthma control after a 12 months treatment.

NCT ID: NCT03931954 Completed - Severe Asthma Clinical Trials

Prevalence of the Eosinophilic Phenotype Among Severe Asthma Patients

PREPARE
Start date: May 15, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The purpose of this cross-sectional, multicenter study is to determine the prevalence of an eosinophilic phenotype of blood eosinophil count ≥ 300 cells/mm3 among severe asthma patients who attend to sites specialized in the management of severe asthma in several countries in the AstraZeneca International Region. The prevalence of an atopic phenotype and asthma control, will also be studied.

NCT ID: NCT03925415 Completed - Severe Asthma Clinical Trials

BRazilian Asthmatics Patients EOSinophilic Profile (BRAEOS)

BRAEOS
Start date: January 24, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Asthma is a complex and heterogeneous disease. Severe asthma is recognised as a major unmet need that poses a great burden on the healthcare system. While accounting for only a small proportion of the total asthmatic population, asthma-related costs are 1.7 to 4-fold higher than those observed in the mild-persistent asthma population and the associated personal and societal impact is significant. Severe asthma is not considered to be a single disease, but can be 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 with a high concentration of eosinophils require greater healthcare resource use, overall greater disease management costs and have 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 represents an added challenge for health care professionals. Thus, severe asthma management is a complex endeavour and a thorough and up to date understanding of the pathophysiologic characteristics of the patient population promotes effective therapeutic decision-making. The purpose of this observational, cross-sectional, multicentre study is to determine the prevalence of an eosinophilic phenotype of blood eosinophil count > 300 cells/mm3 among severe asthma patients followed at Brazilian sites specialized in the management of severe asthma. The prevalence of an atopic phenotype, asthma control, QoL and burden of disease will also be studied.

NCT ID: NCT03629782 Completed - Severe Asthma Clinical Trials

Characterisation of Patients With Severe Asthma in Primary and Secondary Care Settings in Europe Reported to be Eligible for Biological Therapy

RECOGNISE
Start date: April 26, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This is a multi-country, multicentre, observational cross-sectional one-visit study of patients suffering from severe asthma in primary and secondary care settings in Europe

NCT ID: NCT03387722 Completed - Severe Asthma Clinical Trials

Assessment of Treatment Patterns of Severe Asthmatic Patients Across the Gulf Region - SevEos Study

SevEos
Start date: December 31, 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational

SevEos is a cross-sectional, multi-center, non-interventional study aimed to describe the treatment patterns in 250 severe asthma patients across the Gulf region. In addition, the study will determine the current level of asthma control and quality of life in these patients; describe the exacerbation patterns; and determine the current levels of blood eosinophils for the enrolled patients.

NCT ID: NCT03361111 Completed - Severe Asthma Clinical Trials

BIOmarkers in Severe AsthMa Patients on Omalizumab Treatment

BIOSAMOT
Start date: April 4, 2013
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Eosinophil infiltration and degranulation in airways has been implicated in the pathology of asthma. Periostin is considered to be a marker of eosinophilic inflammation and is one of the highly expressed genes in epithelial cells and lung fibroblasts in asthma. Omalizumab is approved as add-on therapy in the treatment of severe allergic asthma. The aim of the study is to assess inflammatory biomarkers including: blood and sputum eosinophilia, periostin and IL-6 as long-term clinical outcomes of omalizumab therapy.

NCT ID: NCT03074942 Completed - Severe Asthma Clinical Trials

Reslizumab in Patients With Severe Asthma Who Failed to Respond to Omalizumab

Start date: April 20, 2017
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Approximately, 5% of the patients with asthma suffer a difficult-to-control severe variant of the disease. Despite being treated with inhaled corticosteroids (ICs), long-acting β2-agonists (LABA), oral corticosteroids or omalizumab, one or more components of the control concept (symptoms, exacerbations, bronchial obstruction) remain to be resolved. Omalizumab has been proven to safely reduce asthma exacerbations and to decease symptoms and quality of life in severe allergic asthmatics. However, approximately 25% of the treated patients fail to respond to this monoclonal antibody. The rest of them show different degrees of response, although the rate of asthmatics who achieve control of the disease is unknown because clinical trials of omalizumab have been carried out to assess the impact of the drug on exacerbations, symptoms or even pulmonary function, but its effect on control was not evaluated. Therefore, there is a need to find new therapeutic options for those severe asthmatics who remain uncontrolled despite having received all the recommended therapies (including omalizumab). Reslizumab is a humanized anti-interleukin-5 (IL-5) monoclonal antibody (mAb) that has been recently found to reduce exacerbations and to improve pulmonary function and symptoms in patients with severe asthma and high peripheral eosinophil counts. It would be important to demonstrate that Reslizumab is able to improve the clinical condition of severe asthma patients with no therapeutic options.

NCT ID: NCT03065920 Completed - Severe Asthma Clinical Trials

African Severe Asthma Program: A Research Network for Characterisation of Severe Asthma in Africans (ASAP)

ASAP
Start date: April 2016
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

This study is a prospective observational multicentre cohort study of asthma patients in Eastern Africa whose objectives will be; The primary objective of this project is to identify and characterize severe asthma in Eastern Africa in order to understand its demographic, clinical, physiologic, pathologic, genomic and immunologic determinants. Secondary objective(s) are; Compare the annual healthcare utilisation (HCU) (emergency room visits, hospitalization including admission to critical care units and unscheduled outpatient clinic or office visits), exacerbation, quality of life and mortality rates of severe and not- severe asthma patients Determine the factors associated with the asthma HCU events, quality of life, exacerbations and mortality The study will enroll 1676 patients aged between 12 and 70 years and follow up each patient for up to one year.

NCT ID: NCT01350336 Completed - Severe Asthma Clinical Trials

Bronchial Thermoplasty in Severe Persistent Asthma

PAS2
Start date: April 7, 2011
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

As Conditions of Approval of the PMA for the Alair System, the FDA requires Boston Scientific to generate data to assess the durability of the BT treatment effect as well as safety data in the intended use population in the United States.

NCT ID: NCT00621946 Completed - Severe Asthma Clinical Trials

Treatment of Outpatients With Severe Asthma and Moderate or Severe Major Depressive Disorder

Start date: March 2008
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The purpose is to determine if: 1) Escitalopram treatment will be associated with less oral corticosteroid use than placebo in outpatients with severe asthma and moderate or severe major depressive disorder (MDD). 2) Escitalopram treatment will be associated with greater improvement in asthma symptoms than placebo in outpatients with severe asthma and moderate or severe MDD. 3) Escitalopram treatment will be associated with greater depressive symptom remission rates than placebo in outpatients with severe asthma and moderate or severe MDD.