Asthma in Children Clinical Trial
— TioNAAPOfficial title:
Tiotropium vs. Inhaled Corticosteroids in Children With Nonatopic Asthma Pilot Study
Most children with asthma have concurrent atopy (allergic inflammation), which is associated with an improved response to ICS. However, the absence of an atopic phenotype is associated with a poorer ICS response, leaving clinicians with limited treatment options. The nonatopic asthma phenotype has been characterized as the absence of atopic diseases including allergic rhinitis, eczema, or food allergies, and a negative skin prick test to common aeroallergens. Children with mild asthma treated with ICS over 44 weeks without a positive allergen skin test are 3 times more likely to have an asthma exacerbation when compared with children with positive skin tests. Similarly, adolescents and adults with asthma with low blood eosinophils or low sputum eosinophils have no difference in exacerbation rate response to ICS compared with placebo. Due to poor ICS response in nonatopic children and the known adverse effects of ICS, the development of non-steroid treatments options is needed. Monotherapy with the long-acting muscarinic antagonist, tiotropium, was superior to placebo for treatment failure outcomes in adolescents and adults with low sputum eosinophil levels. Tiotropium is approved in children as an add on therapy to ICS in children ≥ 6 years with asthma. But, this combination of treatment would still expose children with nonatopic asthma to the risks (but potentially without the benefit) of ICS therapy. The objective of this study is to conduct a feasibility pilot safety study of 6-weeks treatment with tiotropium monotherapy vs. ICS in children ages 6 to 11 years old with nonatopic mild persistent asthma.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 26 |
Est. completion date | July 28, 2024 |
Est. primary completion date | July 28, 2024 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 6 Years to 11 Years |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: 1. Children ages 6 to 11 years with controlled mild nonatopic persistent physician diagnosed asthma 1. Non-atopic asthma: absence of a positive SPT to inhaled aeroallergens or negative specific IgE to a common regional allergen panel; historical serum IgE less than 200 IU/ml; historical serum eosinophils less than 350 cells per microliter (cells/mcL); no history of eczema; no history of allergic rhinitis; no history of food allergy 2. Physician-diagnosed asthma: positive family history, recurrent asthma symptoms, bronchodilator responsiveness, and evidence of obstruction. 3. Mild persistent asthma: current treatment with as-needed albuterol or low-dose ICS or daily montelukast (Step 2 therapy) 4. Controlled asthma: Childhood Asthma Control Test score >19 2. Pre-bronchodilator FEV1 = 80% of predicted Exclusion Criteria: 1. Oral corticosteroid use in the past 6 weeks 2. Use of ICS in combination with long-acting beta agonist or montelukast 3. History of life-threatening asthma requiring treatment with intubation or mechanical ventilation within the past 5 years 4. Respiratory tract infection within the past 4 weeks 5. Any other chronic diseases or medical conditions (other than asthma) that in the opinion of the investigator would prevent participation in a trial |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | Nemours Specialty Care | Jacksonville | Florida |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Nemours Children's Clinic |
United States,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Change in c-ACT score between standard therapy (inhaled corticosteroids) and tiotropium | The primary outcome is change in asthma control from baseline to the end of 6-weeks treatment with tiotropium versus ICS. Asthma control will be assessed by the Childhood Asthma Control Test (c-ACT) score. The c-ACT is well validated for assessing asthma control in children aged 4-11 years.41 The c-ACT ranges from 0 to 27; a score of 19 indicates inadequately controlled asthma. | The c-ACT will be collected during visit #1 in day 1; visit #2 after 6 weeks at the end of the first arm; visit #3 after 8 weeks at the end of the "wash-out period"; and visit #4 after 14 weeks at the last visit. | |
Secondary | Spirometry FEV1 | The National Heart Lung and Blood Institute Guidelines for the Diagnosis and Management of Asthma categorizes lung function measured as the Forced Expiratory Volume in the first second (FEV1) % predicted of normal into three levels: 1) above 80% predicted, typical of mild asthma (both intermittent and persistent); 2) 60% to 80% predicted, typical of moderate persistent asthma; and 3) below 60% predicted, typical of severe persistent asthma. We will compare the change in FEV1 % predicted over the treatment period for tiotropium versus ICS. | The Spirometry FEV1 will be collected during visit #1 in day 1; visit #2 after 6 weeks at the end of the first arm; visit #3 after 8 weeks at the end of the "wash-out period"; and visit #4 after 14 | |
Secondary | Fractional Exhaled Nitric Oxide (FeNO) | Biomarker for atopy and will be collected at baseline to be used as covariates in the analysis. | The Fractional Exhaled Nitric Oxide (FeNO) will be collecte on day #1 duringf the first visit. | |
Secondary | Complete Blood Count with Differential (CBC) | Biomarker for atopy and will be collected at baseline to be used as covariates in the analysis. | The Complete Blood Count with Differential (CBC) will be collecte on day #1 duringf the first visit. | |
Secondary | Daily Digital Diary | Asthma symptoms will be assessed using a real-time electronic diary card to capture daily asthma symptoms. This electronic diary card was developed by Dr. Blake for a pilot study funded by the American Lung Association to capture episodes of respiratory tract infections causing respiratory distress in young children. The electronic diary will be modified for this study to capture asthma exacerbations and symptom load. Briefly, each morning, the parent will receive a text with a link to a survey (from REDCap) with a single question "Has your child had had any asthma symptoms in the past 24 hours?" If the parent responds 'yes', a further survey will open to ask albuterol use, prednisone use, unscheduled contact, and frequency of asthma episodes in the past 24 hours that may be an early indication of worsening asthma control. | The subjects will answer the Daily Digital Diary every day from day 1 until the completion of the study at 14 weeks. |
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