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Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease.

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NCT ID: NCT04206007 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Moderate

Mesenchymal Stem Cells for The Treatment of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Start date: June 11, 2020
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

The clinical study with UMC119-06 is designed to investigate the safety in patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease. This will be a dose escalation, open label, single-center study in adult with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. UMC119-06 is ex vivo cultured human umbilical cord tissue-derived mesenchymal stem cells product which is intended for treatment of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

NCT ID: NCT04201548 Active, not recruiting - Copd Clinical Trials

Different Modalities of Exercise Training in COPD With Chronic Respiratory Failure (CRF)

Start date: August 28, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Advanced Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) is a condition with a negative prognosis that causes symptoms such as wheezing and fatigue that dramatically reduce the quality of life of the person with the disease. Typically, the advanced stage of COPD is characterized by a fluctuating pattern and recurrent hospitalizations, and by a vicious circle in which dyspnoea increases and exercise tolerance reduces, causing depression with social isolation, low quality of life and increased risk of death. Muscle dysfunction in these patients contributes together with dynamic hyperinflation to increased fatigue and dyspnoea during exercise, leading to early interruption of exertion, before reaching the maximal aerobic capacity. The European and American guidelines of the American Thoracic Society / European Respiratory Society relating to the patient with COPD emphasize the need for the patient to undergo Respiratory Rehabilitation (RR) programs. The RR should include training programs as they improve exercise capacity, dyspnoea and quality of life more than programs that do not include training. To our knowledge, no study has been performed in COPD with chronic respiratory failure (CRF) patients to evaluate the effects of High Interval Training compared to continuous submaximal training. Moreover, no different interval training protocols have been compared. However, studies conducted on healthy subjects or on other pathologies, show how the interval training protocol induces, in a specific and diversified way, physiological modifications to the cardio-respiratory and muscular systems. In COPD patients with respiratory failure with marked muscular dysfunction and associated systemic changes (systemic inflammation, vascular changes, pulmonary hypertension, right heart failure, etc.), the evaluation of the best training program would reinforce the rehabilitative indications not yet fully proposed in the Guidelines. Moreover, the evaluation of the response to different training stimuli could provide important information on the reversibility of the intolerance to the effort in this patient population. Primary aim of this study will be to evaluate the physiological effects on exercise tolerance of three training modalities performed in an intra-hospital setting (classic endurance training compared to two high-intensity interval programs - Long Interval Training and Short Interval training) in a population of COPD patients with chronic hypoxemic respiratory failure.

NCT ID: NCT04166812 Active, not recruiting - COPD Clinical Trials

Change in Airway Peripheral Tone in COPD

CAPTO-COPD
Start date: November 19, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Small airways disease is a pathological feature in mild to moderate COPD, which might be causally involved in disease progression. However, there are only limited studies available that prospectively identified patients at risk for small airway disease. Our intention is to investigate the early phase of the disease. In addition, we thereby want to build up a well-defined study population of patients in an early phase of the disease with a rapid decrease in lung function as measured by oscillometry and multiple breath washout (MBW)-testing. In addition, it is our goal to identify patients in an early stage of disease and patients at risk of fast progression and/or rapid decline in lung function.

NCT ID: NCT04140097 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Predictors of Acute Exacerbation in Patients With COPD - an Observational Study

PACE
Start date: February 26, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a lung disease characterized by respiratory problems and poor airflow with dyspnea and cough being the main symptoms. Acute exacerbations of COPD (AECOPD) are the most important events for patients with COPD that have a negative impact on patients´ quality of life, accelerate disease progression, and can result in hospital admissions and death. It is of major clinical importance to determine predictors of an AECOPD and to identify patients who are at high risk for developing an acute exacerbation and/or to detect the beginning of or prevent an ongoing acute exacerbation as early as possible. Until now, research in the field of AECOPD has gathered and analyzed data only after manifestation of AECOPD until recovery and most of them used a retrospective study design. Therefore, the aim of this prospective trial is to collect clinical data in patients prior to the first visible clinical signs of an AECOPD to investigate potential early predictors of an AECOPD.

NCT ID: NCT04136418 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Predict&Prevent: Use of a Personalised Early Warning Decision Support System to Predict and Prevent Acute Exacerbations of COPD

Start date: October 7, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

COPD is a common complex disease with debilitating breathlessness; mortality and reduced quality of life, accelerated by frequent lung attacks (exacerbations). Changes in breathlessness, cough and/or sputum production often change before exacerbations but patients cannot judge the importance of such changes so they remain unreported and untreated. Remote monitoring systems have been developed but none have yet convincingly shown the ability to identify these early changes of an exacerbation and how severe they can be. This study asks if a smart digital health intervention (COPDPredict™) can be used by both COPD patients and clinicians to improve self-management, predict lung attacks early, intervene promptly, and avoid hospitalisation. COPDPredict™ consists of a patient-facing App and clinician-facing smart early warning decision support system. It collects and processes information to determine a patient's health through a combination of wellbeing scores, lung function and biomarker measurements. This information is combined to generate personalised lung health profiles. As each patient is monitored over time, the system detects changes from an individual's 'usual health' and indicates the likelihood of imminent exacerbation of COPD. When this happens, alerts are sent to both the individual and the clinician, with instructions to the patient on what actions to take. Any advice from clinicians can be exchanged via the App's secure messaging facility. If patients have followed the action plan but fail to improve or if an episode triggers an 'at high risk alert', clinicians are further prompted to case manage and intervene with escalated treatment, including home visits, if necessary. The COPDPredict™ intervention aims to assist patients and clinicians in preventing clinical deterioration from COPD exacerbations with prompt appropriate intervention. This study will randomise 384 patients who have frequent exacerbations, from hospitals in the West Midlands, to either (1) standard self-management plan (SSMP) with rescue medication (RM), or (2) COPDPredict™ and RM.

NCT ID: NCT04117399 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Effect of Inspiratory Muscle Training on Posture in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Patients

Start date: February 1, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a respiratory disease that results in progressive airflow limitation and respiratory distress. Physiopathological features of COPD suggest that people who suffer from this disease have many risk factors for falls that have been identified in older individuals. Risk of falls is multi-factorial and impaired balance has been shown to contribute. The investigators aimed to demonstrate that, IMT performed during a PRP may improve Postural control in COPD patients.

NCT ID: NCT04108143 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Use of MonitorMe in COPD

Start date: February 11, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

MonitorMe is a telephone device intended for the non-critical monitoring of vital signs in a domestic environment with the ability to automatically transmit data to a remote location via basic telephone connectivity. MonitorMe's low-cost, call automation and simple to use technology (i.e. based on the principles of an ordinary plug-in telephone) make it appropriate for a wide number of care pathways. It eliminates the need for a modem or broadband and avoids the challenges of less reliable smart phone technology. Typical use scenarios include remote monitoring of individual or multiple chronic disease states such as COPD to improve patient outcomes including prevention of emergency admissions. There is growing interest in the use of home telemonitoring in COPD in order to facilitate the management of the increasing numbers of patients and pressures on the NHS. Despite the positive effects of telemonitoring in conditions such as heart failure, benefits remain unproven in COPD and further work is required before wide-scale use. Furthermore, until now the evaluation of telecare and telehealth developments has focused mainly on effectiveness and efficiency, whereas their social, and ethical implications in particular, have not been explored in depth. We will also explore ethical issues related to the use of telehealth systems, from both the patients' and the healthcare professionals' perspective. The current feasibility study is designed to assess the acceptability, usability and validity of MonitorMe within one of its intended purposes i.e. remote monitoring of individual or multiple chronic disease states such as COPD.

NCT ID: NCT04107831 Active, not recruiting - COPD Clinical Trials

Physical Function in Patients With Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Start date: August 9, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The aims of the study are to examine the responsiveness of, and the correlation between field walk tests and physical performance test in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) after participating in pulmonary rehabilitation.

NCT ID: NCT04098718 Active, not recruiting - Asthma Clinical Trials

Acute Exacerbations Treated With BenRAlizumab (The ABRA Study)

ABRA
Start date: March 29, 2021
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Exacerbations of asthma and COPD are an important cause of hospital admission and the main cause of annual winter bed shortages. Despite current guideline treatment with prednisolone, 40% of patients require further treatment, 15% are readmitted and, of those hospitalised, 10% die within 3 months, all by definition treatment failures. The investigators have shown that there are two dominant patterns of airway inflammation in patients presenting with an acute episode: infection associated neutrophilic airway inflammation; and non-infection related eosinophilic airway inflammation. These patterns cannot be distinguished reliably by clinical categories (i.e. asthma or COPD) or a standard clinical assessment but are identified by the peripheral blood eosinophil count. These findings raise important questions that targeted treatment based on the blood eosinophil count would result in more efficient and effective management. However, even in patients with the right pattern of airway inflammation the beneficial effects of prednisolone have to be offset against a high potential for harm, with an estimated the number needed to harm as 5 for every 10 patients treated. Benralizumab is an interleukin-5 receptor-α monoclonal antibody, injected subcutaneously, which rapidly reduces peripheral blood eosinophils for 90 days with a satisfactory safety profile. Benralizumab treatment at stable state has been shown to increase post-bronchodilator FEV1 and reduce the rates of severe exacerbations in patients with severe eosinophilic asthma and improve lung function in patients with eosinophilic COPD. Benralizumab is an attractive candidate for the acute treatment of eosinophilic exacerbations, without the side-effects of prednisolone. The investigators propose to test the hypothesis that, for participants who have a raised eosinophil count at exacerbation, a single injection of Benralizumab alone or in combination with prednisolone will improve clinical outcomes compared to prednisolone alone. The investigators will also study the effect of prednisolone on symptoms, lung function and quality of life, in an exacerbation when the eosinophil count is not raised.

NCT ID: NCT04090671 Active, not recruiting - COPD Clinical Trials

Evaluation of the Multidimensional Dyspnea Profile (MDP)

Start date: December 19, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Aim of this multicenter prospective cohort study is the evaluation of the multidimensional qualities of dyspnea in a number of diseases using the Multidimensional Dyspnea Profile (Banzett et al, ERJ 2015).