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Clinical Trial Summary

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) is a common preventable and treatable respiratory condition. Its main symptoms include, breathlessness, cough and frequent chest infections. Many people with COPD struggle with excessive production of sputum, resulting in more hospital admissions and worse symptoms affecting quality of life. Guidelines suggest techniques to help clear sputum but there is not strong evidence behind these. In particular we don't know how effective cough clearance techniques are and indeed if any are better than others. This study will recruit people admitted to hospital with an exacerbation of COPD who have excessive sputum and randomise them to receive a hand-held airways clearance device or chest physiotherapy exercises. We will compare symptoms, quality of life, treatment burden and hospital admissions over the following year.


Clinical Trial Description

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) is a common, preventable and treatable disease and in the UK around 80% is caused by smoking. Respiratory symptoms include breathlessness, cough and excess sputum production. COPD is associated with significant healthcare burden and increased mortality and morbidity (GOLD, 2020). Exacerbations are acute periods of worsening symptoms above normal day to day variation, leading to increased treatment and often emergency hospital admissions placing a significant burden on the health care system and are associated with a worse QoL and poorer long-term prognosis. (Ekberg-Aronsson et al., 2005). COPD causes over 30,000 deaths in the UK annually, and is the second commonest cause of hospital admission (NICE, 2018). Patients with a chronic bronchitis phenotype have worse health status and COPD Assessment Test (CAT) score, experience more frequent exacerbations and received more pharmacological treatment than other phenotypes (Cosio et al., 2016). Airways clearance appears an important adjunctive treatment in those with a chronic bronchitis phenotype of COPD who struggle with mucus hypersecretion (Svenningsen et al., 2016) but the evidence is not strong. In particular there are no well-designed studies (Randomised control trials-RCT's) that compare different types of cough clearance techniques against medication alone or against each other. Burudpakdee et al. (2017) in a retrospective Canadian database analysis enrolled 405 participants into two crossmatch groups over a two-year period, found that provision of Oscillatory Positive Expiratory Pressure (OPEP) Aerobika™ devices were associated with a 19% re-exacerbation rate, compared with a 28% exacerbation rate in those receiving standard care (p=0.01). They suggested Aerobika™ may be a cost-effective way of reducing emergency department visits and costs associated with unplanned admissions. However, as this was a retrospective study, the data used to make these assumptions may lack clinical detail and be prone to reporting and selection bias. The physiological rational for the use of AerobikaTM is demonstrated in Svenningsen et al. (2016) in a randomised crossover study. Regular use of Aerobika™ improved ventilation through sputum mobilisation which seemed to have a positive effect on QoL, ease of expectoration and pulmonary function -Forced Vital Capacity (FVC). Several studies including Khoudigian-Sinani et al. (2017) and Thanh et al. (2019) analysed the cost effectiveness of the provision of an Aerobika™ in the United States and Canada respectively. Both studies concluded that Aerobika™ provided good value for money in reducing healthcare costs. NICE (2018) guidelines state: "If people have excessive sputum, they should be taught how to use positive expiratory pressure devices or active cycle of breathing techniques". Despite a paucity of evidence NICE (2018) regard both OPEP (Aerobika™) and Active Cycle of Breathing Techniques (ACBT) as standard care in those people with COPD with excessive secretions. The reality in clinical care is that ACBT forms the first line treatment option with OPEP AerobikaTM offered as second line due to funding. There is a lack of evidence to support this decision making. OBJECTIVES AND OUTCOME MEASURES/ENDPOINTS Rationale This study aims to provide some more robust information to inform clinicians of the effectiveness and tolerability of ACBT or OPEP (AerobikaTM) as part of an airway's clearance regime, in people with COPD and a chronic bronchitis phenotype. 5.2. Aims and Objectives A feasibility Randomised Control Trial (RCT) including real world evidence to assess the outcomes of OPEP (AerobikaTM) for people with COPD with a chronic bronchitis phenotype Primary Objectives • To test the null hypothesis there is no difference in LCQ between groups at 3 months Secondary Objectives - To test the null hypothesis there is no difference in CAT between groups at 3 months - To test the null hypothesis there is no difference in numbers and duration of hospital admissions at 1, 6 and 12 months. - To compare numbers and duration of hospital admissions in the 12 months prior to starting the trial and 12 months after starting the trial within and between each group - Time to first exacerbation between groups - To compare number of courses of oral antibiotics or steroids - To compare reported healthcare contacts in both groups at 1, 3 and 12 months - To compare the proportions of participants achieving a change of >+2 on the LCQ in the ACBT versus OPEP groups at 3 and 12 months - To compare the proportions of participants achieving a change of >-2 on the CAT in the ACBT versus OPEP groups at 3 and 12 months - To note measures of cough severity (LCQ) and Quality of Life (QoL) (CAT and SF-36) within groups over time - To note patient feedback on the tolerability and acceptability of AerobikaTM and ACBT (free text and Likert questions) - To identify refusal, study completion and adherence ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05548036
Study type Interventional
Source Hywel Dda Health Board
Contact Carwyn G Bridges, PI
Phone 02921826841
Email carwyn.bridges2@wales.nhs.uk
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date September 10, 2021
Completion date April 2024

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