View clinical trials related to COPD Exacerbation.
Filter by:A 12 month interventional study of up to 1,050 people with COPD to determine if the NuvoAir virtual-first clinical service leads to fewer moderate and severe COPD exacerbations and cardiac events, reduces healthcare utilization, and lowers the total cost of care compared to a control cohort that receives standard care only.
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a chronic lung disease affecting approximately 10% of the adult population globally. COPD is recognised to be an important area of focus, as part of one of the healthcare challenges defined by the Office of Life Sciences. Patients with COPD often experience exacerbations which are triggered episodes leading to disease worsening. Exacerbations are associated with increased morbidity and a risk of mortality. Severe exacerbations, where patients are hospitalised, are of particular concern to patients, carers and healthcare givers. The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) recommends that hospital clinicians looking after patients with COPD should provide rescue packs (a course of prednisolone and antibiotics) and a basic management plan to patients on discharge. It is recognised that there is a high-risk 90-day period to patients with COPD following discharge from hospital, where there is a 43% risk of readmission and a 12% risk of mortality; however repeated national audit data has shown that, despite NICE recommendations this high risk of readmission and mortality has not changed. A multicentre randomised clinical trial of 1400 patients will be conducted in 30 acute NHS trusts. This will test the hypothesis that a self-supported rescue pack management plan consisting of rescue packs + written self-management plan + twice weekly telephone/text symptom alert assessments in the high-risk 90-day period is better than standard care in reducing 90-day readmission by 20%. If successful, this intervention would be rapidly implementable, improve patient clinical outcomes and have a cost saving of approximately £350 million per annum.
A sub-nasal mask with a skirt that fits the nostrils and with a dedicated port for the nasogastric tube has recently been introduced. This interface has never been compared to nasal-oral masks. We hypothesise that such a sub-nasal mask increases comfort compared to a conventional naso-oral mask. The primary objective is to compare the comfort of the sub-nasal mask with that of a standard naso-oral mask.
Acute exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (AECOPD) is understood as a complex and heterogeneous syndrome, which requires an increasingly personalized approach. A new approach to AECOPD recognized that several etiopathogenic mechanisms can lead to a worsening ot the patients. This new approach is based on the identification of different treatable traits (TTs). The goal of this observational study is to describe how TTs are distributed in patients with AECOPD in primary care (PC) and hospital emergencies department (HED) to address their complexity and heterogeneity. As a secondary outcomes we also try to evaluate the relationship of TTs with relevant clinical outcomes (relapse, recurrence, MACE (Major Adverse Cardiovascular Event) and all-cause mortality) and create a risk score and compare this new severity score with Rome and GesEPOC proposals. In the AP group, a series of basic tests for routine use will be systematically performed, among which chest x-ray, electrocardiogram and other new tests such as microspirometry (COPD-6) and a point of care determination of capillary C-reactive protein (CRP). In the HED group routine determinations will be expanded to include blood tests, arterial blood gases and biomarkers (CRP, TnT, NT-proBNP and D-Dimer). Patients will be re-evaluated 90 days after the initial episode, to evaluate different clinical outcomes. The estimated sample size is 400 patients.
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) and Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA) are both frequent respiratory diseases with estimated prevalences between 8 and 15% of the adult population. Because of those high prevalences those two entities are often associated in same patients (1 to 4% of the general population). This association is then referred to as Overlap Syndrome (CO-OS). Data from observational studies suggest that this association may have an additive or even synergistic negative impact on patient's prognosis. Indeed, in a cohort of patients diagnosed as having a CO-OS, patients who did not receive specific treatment for OSA had a 76% increased risk of death compared to patients treated with continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) and a 2-fold increased risk of acute COPD exacerbation. In another cohort of patients with both OSA and severe oxygen treated COPD, untreated patients for OSA had a 5-fold increased risk of death compared to patients treated with CPAP. There are strong signals from observational studies in support of a beneficial impact of CPAP therapy on respiratory outcomes in patients with CO-OS. However, those findings are not supported by any controlled study. It is difficult to directly transpose the observational data to current clinical practice in the context of the recent studies on the impact of CPAP on OSA prognosis. Indeed, data from similar observational OSA cohorts have reported a major impact of CPAP on the overall survival and cardiovascular outcomes in patients with OSA. Ten years later, this impact has not been confirmed by several randomized studies. To date, there is no consensus on a systematic screening and, if present, management of OSA in patients with COPD. The need for specific research on that field was emphasized in 2018 in an official American Thoracic Society Research Statement which recommends "randomized trials that compare clinical outcomes among patients with Overlap Syndrome whose OSA is treated to clinical outcomes among patients with Overlap Syndrome whose OSA is untreated".
Transitions of Care (TOC) between hospital, ambulatory, and home settings for high-risk, frequently hospitalized adults with chronic diseases, such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) are complex, costly, and vulnerable to safety threats and poor health outcomes. One potential solution to address this gap in care is the Transitional Care Model (TCM), which utilizes a patient-centered approach with in-home interventions; since in-person in-home visits are costly, using innovative telehealth, such as virtual visits via teleconferencing may be just as effective with greater feasibility, scalability, and sustainability, particularly in the post-COVID-19 era as has been seen the rapid expansion of these technologies. With a transdisciplinary team of experts from cognitive science, care transitions/handoffs, human factors engineering, design, implementation science, and health services research, the study team proposes to implement and evaluate via a randomized clinical trial the "TELE-TOC: Telehealth Education: Leveraging Electronic Transitions Of Care for COPD patients," intervention which includes a virtual visit, pharmacy-based, in-home intervention for COPD patients to improve medication use and patient outcomes among a population at high risk for readmission and medication safety events.
The oximeter is an instrument for monitoring patients receiving oxygen therapy. It displays pulse oxygen saturation (SpO2), which is a reflection of arterial oxygen saturation (SaO2). An accurate SpO2 value is essential for optimal management of the O2 flow delivered to patients. Several factors can influence this measurement and the choice of ventilatory support: the type of oximeter used, skin pigmentation and the oxygenation goal. The objective of our study is to evaluate the impact of the oxygenation goal and the oximeter used on oxygen flows in patients with COPD (or with hypercapnia, or at risk of hypercapnia) and in patients without COPD (in particular pneumonia, pulmonary fibrosis and other pathologies) Our hypothesis is that the SpO2 target and oximeter used will have an impact on oxygen flows and that these effects will be synergistic in these different populations.
The goal of this randomized controlled trial is to determine the effect of adding inhaled furosemide to the known treatment of patient with Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) exacerbation. It primarily aims at studying its effect on: 1. Relief of dyspnea sensation 2. Length of hospital stay Participants will be receiving the standard therapy of COPD exacerbation plus either inhaled furosemide or inhaled saline over 3 days. They will be asked to: - Perform spirometry - Fill in dyspnea score - Do arterial blood gases (ABGs)
The aim of our study is to assess the feasibility and benefits of the implementation of an interactive telemonitoring system for earlier detection of COPD exacerbations in a community cohort preventing further deterioration requiring hospital admissions.
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and bronchiectasis are common chronic respiratory diseases in China. COPD is characterized by irreversible lung function decline due to airway inflammation, emphysema and alveolar destruction. Bronchiectasis is characterized by permanent bronchiectasis, its main clinical symptoms are cough, dyspnea, hemoptysis and recurrent respiratory tract infections. The incidence and prevalence of bronchiectasis have assumed continuously grows in global. Airway microbiota, whose alterations play an important role in the occurrence and development of bronchiectasis, form a complex ecosystem interacted with host cells and various biotic and abiotic factors in the microenvironment. Additionally, mounting evidence suggests that the airway microbiome is associated with COPD phenotypes and endotypes, and that dysbiosis contributes to airway inflammation. However, the mechanisms remain poorly understood, owing to limited knowledge of microbial functional properties, metabolic activities and cross-talk with the host immune system. The investigators aim to collect sputum specimen and perform multi-omic analysis on patients with COPD and bronchiectasis in seven clinical centres in China.