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Childhood Asthma clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT04525586 Withdrawn - Childhood Asthma Clinical Trials

lncRNA-based Nomogram to Assist Childhood Asthma Diagnosis

Start date: December 31, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Asthma is the most common chronic disease in children, however, underdiagnosis of childhood asthma is an important issue in asthma management. The lack of reliable and objective diagnostic indicators requires the development of rapid and accurate strategies for the early diagnosis of childhood asthma. Recent studies have found a correlation between long-chain non-coding RNA (lncRNA) expression and childhood asthma, suggesting that lncRNA may be a potential biomarker for asthma diagnosis.

NCT ID: NCT02205723 Withdrawn - Childhood Asthma Clinical Trials

Smartphone-facilitated Asthma Control

SNAPP
Start date: December 3, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The objective of this protocol is to pilot an innovative approach to medication adherence to determine if such an approach will improve inhaled corticosteroid (ICS) medication adherence, a critical gap in improving the health of children with asthma. SNAPP incorporates monitoring, reminders, and dynamic feedback through a smartphone that will improve ICS medication adherence and that the investigators believe will influence the child's future independence and chronic disease-management skills.

NCT ID: NCT01451944 Withdrawn - Asthma Clinical Trials

Effect of Home Health Case Management on Asthma Morbidity

Start date: October 2011
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The objective of our program is to evaluate the effect of home health nurse intervention and education on hospital admissions, ER utilization and asthma control of Passport asthma patients. The investigators hypothesize that case management and in home education by nurses will decrease hospitalizations and ER asthma visits and improves disease control in our population. Our clinic population consists of primarily inner-city, low income, medicaid recipients. This population suffers from severe asthma much more than the typical pediatric population. Asthma remains the most frequent cause of hospital admission for our patient population. Home health nurse asthma education and home visits have been reported to reduce asthma triggers in the home and improve asthma control. The unique partnership between the pediatrician and the home health nurse will give us a better understanding of the health needs for this population, will improve quality of care and deliver more cost effective care.