Asthma Clinical Trial
— InFLOWOfficial title:
Inhaled Fluticasone Effects on Upper Airway Patency in Obstructive Lung Disease
Verified date | January 2020 |
Source | VA Office of Research and Development |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
The Chairman of the Veterans' Disability Benefits Commission reported at a recent US Senate hearing that asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), and sleep apnea are among the top 13 most frequent diagnoses leading to disability under the Department of Defense and the VA system statutes. Recent research finds that sleep apnea is more common among asthma and COPD individuals, and this may be caused by inhaled corticosteroid use. Many Veterans are currently using inhaled corticosteroids, and many more will be prescribed such medications, given their recent inclusion in international treatment guidelines. As such, this study addresses a critical need by researching the role of a potent inhaled corticosteroid in promoting sleep apnea, the determinants of this response, and the ways through which it occurs. Results from this study will form the foundation for future research aimed at expanding understanding of the effects of inhaled corticosteroids on the upper airway, as well as developing means to prevent or counteract them.
Status | Terminated |
Enrollment | 25 |
Est. completion date | April 7, 2016 |
Est. primary completion date | February 3, 2016 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - American Veterans - age 18 and above - diagnosis of asthma and COPD per guidelines - for asthma, persistent symptoms per guidelines - for asthma, a pre-bronchodilator FEV1 55-90% and DLCO 80% predicted - for asthma, physiologic confirmation by bronchodilator or methacholine challenge - for COPD, a post-bronchodilator ratio of FEV1/FVC 70% and FEV1 50% - overall smoking history of <10 pack-years for asthma and 10 pack-years for COPD. Exclusion Criteria: - any use of inhaled corticosteroid for >2 weeks at a time during the last 6 months, or any use in the last 6 weeks; - as needed use of nasal steroids in the prior 6 months - select medications - recent exacerbation requiring oral or systemic steroids in the past 6 months - diagnosed vocal cords dysfunction - other lung diseases (lung cancer, sarcoidosis, tuberculosis, lung fibrosis) or known 1-antitrypsin deficiency - significant or actively unstable medical or psychiatric illnesses - diagnosed osteopenia or osteoporosis - established diagnosis of neuromuscular disease - BMI 45 kg/m2 and higher - treated OSA - pregnancy (confirmed on urine test) or desire to get pregnant in the upcoming 6 months. - smoking in the past 6 months - metallic or electronic implants - claustrophobia |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | William S. Middleton Memorial Veterans Hospital, Madison, WI | Madison | Wisconsin |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
VA Office of Research and Development |
United States,
Humbert IA, Reeder SB, Porcaro EJ, Kays SA, Brittain JH, Robbins J. Simultaneous estimation of tongue volume and fat fraction using IDEAL-FSE. J Magn Reson Imaging. 2008 Aug;28(2):504-8. doi: 10.1002/jmri.21431. — View Citation
Teodorescu M, Xie A, Sorkness CA, Robbins J, Reeder S, Gong Y, Fedie JE, Sexton A, Miller B, Huard T, Hind J, Bioty N, Peterson E, Kunselman SJ, Chinchilli VM, Soler X, Ramsdell J, Loredo J, Israel E, Eckert DJ, Malhotra A. Effects of inhaled fluticasone on upper airway during sleep and wakefulness in asthma: a pilot study. J Clin Sleep Med. 2014 Feb 15;10(2):183-93. doi: 10.5664/jcsm.3450. — View Citation
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Tongue Volume at Week 16 | Tongue volume was assessed on Magnetic Resonance (MR) imaging of the area extending from the level of the roof of the hard palate to the vocal cords, with the subject awake and lying on their back. We used a specialized technique called Iterative Decomposition of water and fat with Echo Asymmetry and Least squares estimation Fast Spin-Echo (IDEAL-FSE), developed at University of Wisconsin by our collaborator and used for assessing the tongue (2). In brief, at first, the method provides well co-registered, separate water and fat images, which are free from the artifact that corrupts the usual MR images. Subsequently, these separate images are recombined in new high resolution images which provide: 1) comprehensive anatomical reference to delineate the tongue and measure its volume, and; 2) unambiguous separation of adipose tissue, to allow determination of fat volume and fraction in the tongue. | 16-week randomized treatment phase | |
Other | Percentage Fat Content (Fat Fraction) of the Tongue at Week 16 | Tongue fat content was assessed on Magnetic Resonance (MR) imaging of the area extending from the level of the roof of the hard palate to the vocal cords, with the subject awake and lying on their back. We used a specialized technique called Iterative Decomposition of water and fat with Echo Asymmetry and Least squares estimation Fast Spin-Echo (IDEAL-FSE), developed at University of Wisconsin by our collaborator and used for assessing the tongue (2). In brief, at first, the method provides well co-registered, separate water and fat images, which are free from the artifact that corrupts the usual MR images. Subsequently, these separate images are recombined in new high resolution images which provide: 1) comprehensive anatomical reference to delineate the tongue and measure its volume, and; 2) unambiguous separation of adipose tissue, to allow determination of fat volume and fraction in the tongue. | 16-week randomized controlled phase | |
Other | Volume of Pharyngeal Upper Airway Surrounding Structures at Week 16 | The volume of pharyngeal upper airway surrounding structures was assessed on Magnetic Resonance (MR) imaging, as we published (1). We scanned the area extending from the level of the roof of the hard palate to the vocal cords, with the subject awake and lying on their back, We used a specialized technique called Iterative Decomposition of water and fat with Echo Asymmetry and Least squares estimation Fast Spin-Echo (IDEAL-FSE). In brief, at first, the method provides well co-registered, separate water and fat images, which are free from the artifact that corrupts the usual MR images. Subsequently, these separate images are recombined in new high resolution images which provide: 1) comprehensive anatomical reference to delineate the tongue and measure its volume, and; 2) unambiguous separation of adipose tissue, to allow determination of fat volume and fraction in the upper airway structures. | 16-week randomized controlled phase | |
Other | Percentage Fat Content (Fat Fraction) of Pharyngeal Upper Airway Surrounding Structures at Week 16 | Pharyngeal upper airway fat content was assessed on Magnetic Resonance (MR) imaging, as we published (1). We scanned the area extending from the level of the roof of the hard palate to the vocal cords, with the subject awake and lying on their back, We used a specialized technique called Iterative Decomposition of water and fat with Echo Asymmetry and Least squares estimation Fast Spin-Echo (IDEAL-FSE). In brief, at first, the method provides well co-registered, separate water and fat images, which are free from the artifact that corrupts the usual MR images. Subsequently, these separate images are recombined in new high resolution images which provide: 1) comprehensive anatomical reference to delineate the tongue and measure its volume, and; 2) unambiguous separation of adipose tissue, to allow determination of fat volume and fraction in the upper airway structures. | 16-week randomized controlled phase | |
Primary | Upper Airway Critical Closing Pressure (Pcrit) at Week 16 | Pressure at which the pharyngeal upper airway closes during stable non-REM sleep, measured as described in the referenced citation. | 16-week randomized controlled phase | |
Secondary | Tongue Strength at Anterior Location at Week 16 | Wakefulness tongue function was measured using the Iowa Oral Performance Instrument (IOPI) at anterior and posterior tongue locations, as described in the referenced citation. In brief, this instrument has a small-sized, air-filled plastic balloon, called sensor or bulb, which was inserted between the tongue blade and the roof of the mouth. At each location, the tongue strength was determined as the maximum pressure generated against the IOPI bulb during a forced tongue contraction. Several standardized trials were conducted to ensure reproducibility. | 16-week randomized phase | |
Secondary | Tongue Strength at Posterior Location at Week 16 | Wakefulness tongue function was measured using the Iowa Oral Performance Instrument (IOPI) at anterior and posterior tongue locations, as described in the referenced citation. In brief, this instrument has a small-sized, air-filled plastic balloon, called sensor or bulb, which was inserted between the tongue blade and the roof of the mouth. At each location, the tongue strength was determined as the maximum pressure generated against the IOPI bulb during a forced tongue contraction. Several standardized trials were conducted to ensure reproducibility. | 16-week randomized phase | |
Secondary | Tongue Fatigability at Anterior Location at Week 16 | Wakefulness tongue function was measured using the Iowa Oral Performance Instrument (IOPI) at anterior and posterior tongue locations, as described in the referenced citation. In brief, this instrument has a small-sized, air-filled plastic balloon, called sensor or bulb, which was inserted between the tongue blade and the roof of the mouth. At each location, the tongue strength was determined as the maximum pressure generated against the IOPI bulb during a forced tongue contraction. Then, tongue fatigability was measured through a submaximal task, as the time (in seconds) able to maintain > 50% of the above measured strength, at each location. Several standardized trials were conducted for each measure and at each location, to ensure reproducibility. | 16-week randomized treatment phase | |
Secondary | Tongue Fatigability of Posterior Location at Week 16 | Wakefulness tongue function was measured using the Iowa Oral Performance Instrument (IOPI) at anterior and posterior tongue locations, as described in the referenced citation. In brief, this instrument has a small-sized, air-filled plastic balloon, called sensor or bulb, which was inserted between the tongue blade and the roof of the mouth. At each location, the tongue strength was determined as the maximum pressure generated against the IOPI bulb during a forced tongue contraction. Then, tongue fatigability was measured through a submaximal task, as the time (in seconds) able to maintain > 50% of the above measured strength, at each location. Several standardized trials were conducted for each measure and at each location, to ensure reproducibility. | 16-week randomized treatment phase |
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