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Asthma Brittle clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05686941 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Vocal Cord Dysfunction

Is Laryngeal Ultrasound Useful in the Assessment for ILO? A Protocol for a Two-stage Exploratory Pilot Study

Start date: August 24, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study is a feasibility study to see if an ultrasound scan of the vocal cords can detect narrowing of the vocal cords as seen in a condition called inducible laryngeal Obstruction (the vocal cords narrow or close on breathing in, which makes it very difficult to breathe).

NCT ID: NCT03324230 Completed - Asthma Brittle Clinical Trials

Exploring Asthma Exacerbations in Mepolizumab Treated Patients

Start date: December 1, 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This is a multicentre, observational study focusing on exacerbation events in patients with severe eosinophilic asthma on Mepolizumab. Mepolizumab is an anti-IL5 (Interleukin 5) monoclonal antibody which blocks the eosinophilic activation pathways associated with decreasing asthma control. The pre-licensing studies have shown that Mepolizumab decreases asthma exacerbation events by approximately 50%, this study seeks to understand the underlying mechanisms of the remaining 50% of exacerbations. The study will enrol patients within GINA classification 4 and 5 who are known to difficult asthma services across four UK sites. Some patients will recently have been commenced on Mepolizumab, whilst others will be commenced on the drug on entry to the study. The patients will have baseline measurements of biomarkers, lung function, sputum analysis and quality of life questionnaires on study entry, after which patients will be asked to contact the clinic at the first signs of worsening asthma symptoms to arrange a clinic visit prior to commencing rescue treatment. They will be clinically assessed with review of peak flow and symptom diaries, measurements taken at baseline will be repeated and a decision on the nature of the exacerbation and treatment required will be made. This is an observational study, all outcomes will be exploratory.