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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT03654508
Other study ID # NL63849.018.17
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date June 12, 2018
Est. completion date October 18, 2023

Study information

Verified date November 2023
Source Academisch Medisch Centrum - Universiteit van Amsterdam (AMC-UvA)
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

There is large heterogeneity in treatment response to asthma medication and a one-size fits all approach based on current guidelines might not fit all children with asthma. It is expected that children with one or more variant alleles (Arg16Arg and Arg16Gly) within the beta2 adrenergic receptor (ADRB2) gene coding for the beta2-receptor have a higher risk to poorly respond to long-acting beta2-agonists (LABA) comparing to the Gly16Gly wildtype. Aims To study whether ADRB2 genotype-guided treatment will lead to improvement in asthma control in children with uncontrolled asthma on inhaled corticosteroids compared with usual care. Design A multicentre, double-blind, precision medicine, randomized trial will be carried out within 20 Dutch hospitals. 310 asthmatic children (6-17 years of age) not well controlled on a low dose of inhaled corticosteroids (ICS) will be included and randomized over a genotype-guided and a non-genotype-guided(control) arm. In the genotype-guided arm children with Arg16Arg and Arg16Gly will be treated with double dosages of ICS and with the Gly16Gly wildtype with add on LABA. In the control arm children will be randomized over both treatment options. Lung function measurements, questionnaires focussing on asthma control (ACT/c-ACT) and quality of life, will be obtained in three visits within 6 months. The primary outcome will be improvement in asthma control based on repeated measurement analysis of c-ACT or ACT scores in the first three months of the trial. Additional cost effectiveness studies will be performed. Conclusion Currently, pharmacogenetics is not used in paediatric asthmas. This trial may pave the way to implement promising results for genotype-guided treatment in paediatric asthma in clinical practice.


Description:

Study design: national, multi-centre, double-blind randomized controlled trial Duration: 6 months, with 3 visits in the hospitals (at t=0, t=3 months and t=6 months) Setting: Patients are recruited at out-patient asthma clinics in secondary and tertiary care hospitals in the Netherlands. Description: Three hundred ten children (6 to 17 years of age) with a doctor's diagnosis of asthma and uncontrolled asthma symptoms despite adherent and adequate use of ICS for at least three months (step 2 asthma treatment) will be recruited by secondary and tertiary care centers in the Netherlands. All participants are eligible for step-up asthma treatment (from step 2 to step 3) as assessed by the treating paediatrician/paediatric pulmonologist. Participants will be randomized to a genotype-guided treatment arm (n=155) or to a usual care, non-genotype guided arm (n=155) and followed for 6 months. Genotyping before start treatment During the baseline visit in the hospital, clinical data and biological samples (including a DNA sample) will be collected. Upon this visit, the DNA sample will be send to the Clinical Chemistry department of the Erasmus MC (Head: Prof. R. van Schaik) to perform genotyping of the ADRB2 gene within one week. The treating physician will adapt the treatment regime of the participant based on the treatment advice of the study coordinator (Table 1). For the children in the genotype-arm, this will be based on the genotype. The treating physician will not know (be blinded) whether the treatment advice was based on the genotype (intervention arm) or based on randomization (control arm). The participant will be followed for 6 months. If the participant is still uncontrolled at t=3 months, treatment will be adapted. All children will be genotyped, in order to assess the influence of the genotype on treatment outcome in the usual arm group retrospectively. The children should use the same inhalation device during the study to avoid confusion on how they should inhale their medication. Furthermore, to test the hypothesis it is necessary to include enough children in the control group with Arg16Arg or Arg16Gly to be treated with LABA. The amount of children treated with LABA and ICS should be equal in the control group. Therefore children are randomized in the control group over doubling ICS (n=77) and adding LABA (n=77). This will lead to an estimated number of children with Arg16Arg or Arg16Gly of 51 who will get LABA add on. In this way the power is high enough to determine the effectivity of both treatment options in the three genotypes. The investigators find it important to define effectivity next to the question whether genotyping benefits children with asthma. In the control group DNA samples will be obtained for retrospective analysis. It is safe to randomise the children again who are randomised within the control arm, because treatment with a double dose of ICS and adding a LABA are both standard of care. A Cochrane review from 2009 has shown that both treatments have proven to be equally effective in both children and adults Randomisation in the control arm is important because it would be futile if the children in this arm would be treated with the same therapy by accident. Randomisation is necessary to make the trial as small and effective as possible. At this moment physicians do not have the tools to determine which therapy is the best for every child. This is why the investigators think it is correct to randomise in the control arm.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 102
Est. completion date October 18, 2023
Est. primary completion date October 18, 2023
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 6 Years to 17 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: - Doctor's diagnosis of asthma (ever) based on patient history, FEV1 reversibility = 12% and/or bronchial hyperresponsiveness - Current asthma symptoms (based on ACT (=12 years) or C-ACT (<12 years) score = 19 - ICS use = 3 months before inclusion (start dosage ICS, treatment step 2 according to childhood asthma guideline NVK, Table 3) - Adequate inhalation technique (based on validated checklist score [21]) - Self-assessed good adherence to maintenance asthma treatment - Understanding of Dutch language - Internet access a home, willing to fill in internet questionnaires Exclusion Criteria: - Active smoking - Congenital heart disease - Serious lung disease other than asthma (Cystic Fibrosis, Primary Ciliary Dyskinesia, congenital lung disorders, severe immune disorders) - LABA use in past 6 months - Omalizumab use - ICU admission in the previous year

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Genetic:
ADRB2-genotype guided treatment
This intervention assesses whether ADRB2 genotype-guided treatment leads to better asthma control after 3 months compared to usual care in children who are uncontrolled despite adherent and adequate use of ICS.
Other:
Randomisation
In the control arm, children will be randomised over double dose ICS or ICS+LABA instead of treatment according to their genotype.

Locations

Country Name City State
Belgium Universitair Ziekenhuis Antwerpen Edegem
Netherlands VUmc locatie Boelelaan Amsterdam Noord-Holland
Netherlands Academic Medical Center, Department of Respiratory Disease Amsterdam-Zuidoost Noord-Holland
Netherlands Rijnstate Arnhem Gelderland
Netherlands Amphia ziekenhuis Breda Noord-Brabant
Netherlands Reinier de Graaf Gasthuis Delft Zuid-Holland
Netherlands Haga ziekenhuis Den Haag Zuid-Holland
Netherlands Nij Smellinghe Drachten Drenthe
Netherlands Catharina ziekenhuis Eindhoven Noord-Brabant
Netherlands Medisch Spectrum Twente Enschede Twente
Netherlands Martini ziekenhuis Groningen
Netherlands University Medical Center Groningen Groningen
Netherlands Tergooi ziekenhuis Hilversum
Netherlands Spaarne Gasthuis Hoofddorp Noord-Holland
Netherlands Medisch Centrum Leeuwarden Leeuwarden Friesland
Netherlands Canisius Wilhelmina Ziekenhuis Nijmegen Gelderland
Netherlands RadboudUMC Nijmegen Gelderland
Netherlands Erasmus Medical Center Rotterdam Zuid-Holland
Netherlands Maasstadziekenhuis Rotterdam Zuid-Holland
Netherlands Sint Franciscus Gasthuis Rotterdam Zuid-Holland
Switzerland Kinderspital Zürich

Sponsors (2)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Academisch Medisch Centrum - Universiteit van Amsterdam (AMC-UvA) Dutch Lung Foundation

Countries where clinical trial is conducted

Belgium,  Netherlands,  Switzerland, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Asthma control based on (childhood-)Asthma Control Test scores in the first 3 months of the trial Patients will fill in the (childhood-)Asthma Control Test at baseline, after 3 months [Range score: 0 - 27, 20 or more means asthma under control] 3 months
Secondary Change in asthma control at t=6 months (childhood-)Asthma Control Test Patients will fill in the (childhood-)Asthma Control Test at baseline after 6 months [Range score: 0 - 27, 20 or more means asthma under control] 6 months
Secondary Change in asthma-related school absences Patients will fill in a questionnaire about asthma-related school absences [Minimum score 0 days, maximum score more than 10 days] 6 months
Secondary Change in therapy in t = 3 months Patients will be questioned what kind of treatment they use at baseline visit, after three months 3 months
Secondary Time to reach asthma control (Asthma Control Test score =20) Patients will fill in the (childhood-)Asthma Control Test at baseline, every month [Range score: 0 - 27, 20 or more means asthma under control] 6 months
Secondary Cost-effectiveness of ADRB2 genotype guided treatment measured by the Productivity Cost Questionnaire Patients will fill in the Productivity Cost Questionnaire at 0, 3 and 6 months. The IPCQ measures:
absenteeism (number of days missed from work in the 4 weeks due to illness) -- minimum is 0, maximum (in theory) is 28 days
Presenteeism (productivity lost while at work due to illness) -- minimum is 0, maximum is 224 hours.
In absenteeism, a lower number of days missed from work represent a better outcome; In presenteeism, a lower number of hours represent a better outcome For presenteeism the number of hours productivity loss is calculated by the following formula using data from the questionnaire.
presenteeism = number of workdays affected by illness * (1-efficiencyscore/10)*working hours per workday.
This results in a monetary value for productivity loss.
3 and 6 months
Secondary In-depth integrative -omics analysis Non-response to ICS treatment will be measured by analysing feces samples (microbiome) and nose swabs (epigenome). Nose swabs will be collected after 0, 3 and 6 months and feces after 1 month 0, 3 and 6 months
Secondary Change in quality of life assessed by the Paediatric Asthma Quality of Life Questionnaire (PAQLQ) score Measured by the Pediatric Asthma-related Quality of Life Questionnaire (PAQLQ). Children are asked to think about how they have been during the previous week and to respond to each of the 32 questions on a 7-point scale (7 = not bothered at all -
1 = extremely bothered). The overall PAQLQ score is the mean of all 23 responses and the individual domain scores are the means of the items in those domains. Subscales are summed.
0, 3 and 6 months
Secondary Change in fatigue scores assessed by the PedsQL questionnaire Measured by the PedsQL questionnaire, a 23 item generic score scale consisting of physiological functioning, emotional functioning, social functioning and school functioning questions with multidimensional scales. Subscales are summed. This modular instrument uses a 5-point scale: from 0 (never) to 4 (almost always). Items are reversed scored and linearly transformed to a 0-100 scale as follows: 0=100, 1=75, 2=50, 3=25, 4=0. 4 dimensions (physical, emotional, social, & school functioning) are scored. 0, 3 and 6 months
Secondary change in FEV1 at t = 3 months FEV1 will be measured at 0 and 3 months, change in FEV1 will be calculated. 0 and 3 months
Secondary change in FEV1 at t = 6 months FEV1 will be measured at t=0 and 6 months, change in FEV1 will be calculated 0, 3 and 6 months
Secondary change in fraction of exhaled nitric oxide at t=3 months Exhaled nitric oxide measures will be performed using the Niox Vero at t=0 and 3 months 0 and 3 months
Secondary change in fraction of exhaled nitric oxide at t=6 months Exhaled nitric oxide measures will be performed using the Niox Vero at t=0. 3 and 6 months 0,3 and 6 months
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