Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Dymista, a combined product containing the antihistamine azelastine and the intranasal steroid fluticasone, provides superior clinical efficacy to both fluticasone propionate and azelastine hydrochloride in the treatment of seasonal allergic rhinitis. The superiority of efficacy not only occurs at the initiation of treatment, but persists for its duration. The mechanism underlying the superior efficacy of Dymista is not known. This trial focuses on examining the effects of Dymista on the dynamics of the allergic response in man using nasal provocation with antigen. The investigators will study the relationship between symptoms, physiology, cells and mediators.


Clinical Trial Description

The main hypothesis for the trial is that Dymista affects multiple phases of the allergic response, which in sum are greater than the effects of fluticasone propionate or azelastine hydrochloride alone.

Our objectives for this study are to demonstrate:

1. that the induction of allergic inflammation by nasal provocation with antigen causes a cellular infiltration, with subsequent release of inflammatory biomarkers that cause augmented responses to subsequent exposure to antigens.

2. that fluticasone prevents allergic inflammation from developing after antigen challenge and subsequently prevents the augmentation of the nasal response to nasal challenge with antigen.

3. that the azelastine in Dymista reduces the effects of released histamine

To address these hypotheses we will perform a 3-way, randomized, placebo-controlled, and crossover trial. We will recruit 20 asymptomatic seasonal allergic rhinitis patients outside of the relevant season. The subjects will receive placebo, fluticasone propionate and Dymista. The nasal provocations will be separated by 2 weeks. Treatment will begin 15 minutes before nasal provocation with ragweed or grass antigen and the treatment will continue twice a day for 3 days. Nasal provocation will occur daily for three days to evaluate for priming (increased sensitization with repeated antigen exposure, which mimics seasonal disease where antigen exposure occurs in the setting of continued allergic inflammation). For outcome measures, we will monitor both nasal symptoms after nasal provocation as well as collect nasal lavage to evaluate effects on eosinophils and biomarkers of the immune response. In the nasal lavage, we will quantify the number of eosinophils (a marker of cellular recruitment) and measure the levels of histamine (a marker of basophil and mast cell activation), tryptase (a marker of mast cell activation), albumin (a marker of vascular permeability), lactoferrin (a marker of glandular activation) and ECP (a marker of eosinophil activation). Thus we expect to generate information on both clinical effects and physiologic differences between the treatments. ;


Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Crossover Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Basic Science


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT02402465
Study type Interventional
Source University of Chicago
Contact Fuad M Baroody, MD
Phone 773-702-4790
Email fbaroody@surgery.bsd.uchicago.edu
Status Recruiting
Phase Phase 4
Start date February 2015
Completion date December 2017

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Recruiting NCT05080322 - Efficacy and Safety of On-demand and Continuous Administration of Nasal Spray in the Treatment of Allergic Rhinitis Phase 4
Recruiting NCT06028490 - A Study of IL4Rα Monoclonal Antibody in Patients With Uncontrolled Seasonal Allergic Rhinitis. Phase 2
Completed NCT04388358 - Traditional Chinese Medicine for the Treatment of Perennial Allergic Rhinitis on Gut Microbiota and Immune-modulation N/A
Recruiting NCT04202263 - Assessment of Suppression of Cutaneous Allergic Responses and Pruritis by Topical Minocycline Phase 2
Completed NCT04078009 - Standardising Nasal Allergen Challenge in Adult With Hay Fever N/A
Completed NCT03644680 - Changes in Adaptive Immune Responses and Effector Cell Responses Upon Nasal Allergen Exposure - a Pilot Study N/A
Completed NCT04541004 - Adolescent Mite Allergy Safety Evaluation Phase 3
Recruiting NCT05378594 - HDM and Silver Birch NAC Standardisation N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT05684380 - Efficacy and Safety of MAZ-101 in the Treatment of Persistent Allergic Rhinitis (PER) Phase 3
Completed NCT02910401 - Clinical Response to Rhinovirus Challenge Phase 2
Completed NCT02943720 - ATIBAR - Efficacy and Safety of Two Doses of AllerT in Patients Allergic to Birch Pollen Phase 2
Not yet recruiting NCT01014325 - Safety and Efficacy Study With Allergen Extracts of House Dust Mites for Specific Sublingual Immunotherapy Phase 3
Completed NCT02556801 - Efficacy and Safety of SUBLIVAC Phleum for Immunotherapy of Grass Pollen-Allergy Phase 2
Completed NCT02352168 - Airway Inflammation in Children With Allergic Rhinitis and Intervention N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT02233426 - Effect of Hypertonic Solutions on Allergic Rhinitis Patients N/A
Completed NCT01918956 - PURETHAL Birch RUSH Study Phase 4
Completed NCT01946035 - Alpha-Blockers in Allergic Rhinitis (MAN 01) Phase 4
Completed NCT01682070 - SUBLIVAC FIX Phleum Pratense DT/DRF Phase 2
Recruiting NCT01454492 - The Relationship Between Allergic Rhinitis and Geographic Tongue N/A
Completed NCT01438463 - PURETHAL® Mites Dose Range Finding Study in Patients With Persistent Allergic Rhinitis/Rhinoconjunctivitis Phase 2