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Clinical Trial Summary

COPD (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease) is a long-lasting lung disease usually caused by long-term smoking. COPD can get worse, making people sick enough to need hospitalization. Corticosteroids are very effective and are almost always used, but nobody knows the right dose. High doses may work better but could cause more side effects than low doses. Typical treatment lengths last at least one week. This study will be comparing two common regimens: either 40mg of corticosteroids daily (low dose), or 80mg of corticosteroids daily (high dose). It is unknown which regimen works better..


Clinical Trial Description

The goal of the study is to determine whether a high-dose corticosteroid regimen in patients admitted to the hospital with COPD exacerbations is associated with better clinical outcomes and at acceptable risk of adverse effects compared to a low-dose corticosteroid regimen. Our hypothesis is that high-dose corticosteroids is associated with a decreased rate of treatment failure, shorter length of hospital stay, and improved quality of life with similar risk of adverse effects. The study population includes patients ≥ 40 years-old with a ≥ 10 pack-years smoking history and a diagnosis of COPD, emphysema, or chronic bronchitis who present to the emergency room with increased dyspnea, increased sputum, or increased cough that requires admission to the hospital. We will perform a prospective, randomized, double-blinded study to determine if a high-dose corticosteroid regimen, which is already in use in clinical practice, decreases treatment failure compared to a low-dose corticosteroid regimen that is based on national consensus guidelines. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT01742338
Study type Interventional
Source Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Contact
Status Terminated
Phase Phase 4
Start date May 3, 2012
Completion date March 15, 2020

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