View clinical trials related to Bronchiectasis Adult.
Filter by:The study is intended to understand the benefit of Long Term Home care Therapy with nasal High flow in Bronchiectasis patients at home. Primary end point is to evaluate daily life compared to usual care and secondary is to evaluate the changes in lung function
Although relatively common, bronchiectasis is considered an orphan disease as there is little evidence for adequate treatment, most of the therapeutic options are extrapolated from studies with patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) or cystic fibrosis (CF). Inhaled bronchodilators and corticosteroids should be used as a therapeutic test and maintained if there is improvement of symptoms or lung function. There is no evidence to justify the use of mucolytic agents for these patients. The treatment with greater evidence is the use of macrolides, especially azithromycin. A meta-analysis published in 2014 showed that there was a reduction in the number of exacerbations, an improvement in the quality of life and a reduction in the decrease in FEV1. However, studies have shown conflicting results regarding quality of life and pulmonary function. Roflumilast is a phosphodiesterase-4 inhibitor with an anti-inflammatory effect in vitro and in vivo due to the inhibition of cyclic adenosine monopostat breakdown (cAMP) to its inactive phosphodiesterase form. As this enzyme is expressed in high concentrations in leukocytes and other inflammatory cells responsible for the pathogenesis of pulmonary diseases such as COPD, it has been studied and used for this disease. COPD is characterized by a chronic inflammatory process of the airways, predominantly neutrophils and high levels of proinflammatory cytokines related to this cell, such as interleukin-8, neutrophil elastase, tumor necrosis factor (TNF) alpha and E-selectin. The REACT study showed that roflumilast prevents moderate and severe infectious exacerbations in addition to improved lung function in patients with COPD who continue to exacerbate despite the use of combined bronchodilator and inhaled corticosteroid therapy. Since bronchiectasis and COPD are chronic inflammatory diseases, they present similar inflammatory processes, with neutrophil as the main inflammatory cell, it is expected that the use of roflumilast also has an anti-inflammatory effect in bronchiectasis. In addition, since bronchiectasis is a disease with poor evidence for pharmacological treatment, it is necessary to search for new therapeutic possibilities.
Bronchiectasis is a complex heterogeneous disorder. Treatment is challenging and many recent randomized controlled trials have been negative. It is believed that bronchiectasis as a broad diagnosis incorporates multiple different patient subgroups (also known as phenotypes) and molecular entities (referred to as endotypes). This study aims to phenotype and endotype bronchiectasis during stable disease and exacerbations, to develop strategies for personalised medicine. Primary Objective To determine molecular endotypes of bronchiectasis which can guide response to treatment. Secondary Objectives 1. To determine molecular endotypes of stable bronchiectasis 2. To determine the causes and inflammatory profiles of bronchiectasis exacerbations 3. To validate candidate biomarkers of stable and exacerbation endotypes to use in stratified medicine 4. To perform in-vivo or in-vitro proof of concept studies using phenotypic data to identify patient populations likely to benefit in future randomized controlled trials This is an observational cohort study that will aim to identify patient subgroups and link these with meaningful clinical outcomes.
This is a phase 3 study. Patients will be enrolled from 14 medical centers in mainland China. Eligible patients will be randomly allocated to treatment group (tobramycin nebulization, 300mg bid) and control group (natural saline nebulization, 5ml bid). A total of two 28-day on-and-off cycles will be scheduled. Both tobramycin solution and natural saline and the nebulizer will be solely provided by the sponsor.
A randomised controlled trial of the safety, tolerability and effectiveness of 2 doses of Cayston (Aztreonam Lysine) compared to placebo in participants with bronchiectasis. Bronchiectasis not due to cystic fibrosis is a chronic inflammatory disease characterised by cough, sputum production and frequent respiratory tract infections. There are currently no licensed therapies for bronchiectasis approved by regulators in the United States or Europe. The disease has a high morbidity, particularly in the presence of chronic P. aeruginosa and other chronic Gram-negative infections. This trial will test the hypothesis that 12 months treatment with Aztreonam lysine for inhalation will be safe and well tolerated, and will result in a significant increase in the time to first pulmonary exacerbation in participants with bronchiectasis and a history of frequent exacerbations. This is a multi-centre randomised double-blind placebo controlled parallel group trial with four treatment arms. It will enroll 100 bronchiectasis patients with a history of at least 3 exacerbations in the previous year and the presence of chronic Gram-negative infection in sputum at screening. Patients will be treated following a one month on, one month off treatment regimen for 12 months. The primary objective is to evaluate the safety and tolerability of Aztrenam lysine in these patients by recording adverse events and trial treatment withdrawals.
The objectives of this research grant are to determine the association of hypoxia with the severity of osteoporosis in the patients with bronchiectasis and whether the mechanism of inflammation is triggered by inflammasones, which makes it more prone to osteoporosis in patients with bronchiectasis.