View clinical trials related to Cystic Fibrosis (CF).
Filter by:The objective of this study is to investigate the impact of hormones on lung disease in Cystic Fibrosis (CF) patients. Due to improved therapies, CF patients are living longer and healthier lives than they did 20 years ago. However, females have been shown to have a survival disadvantage. The median life expectancy is 33 in women and 37 in men with CF. The hypothesis is that estrogen and/or progesterone negatively impact lung health in CF. Therefore, understanding the impact of sex hormones (including the use of birth control pills) on the disease process is increasingly important. The purpose of this study is to determine if lung function, respiratory symptoms, or various markers of lung health change during different phases of the natural ovulatory cycle in order to understand if estrogen or progesterone hormones are impacting the disease relative to fluctuations in men with stable testosterone levels. The research objectives of this project are to: - Determine if lung function, respiratory symptoms, or various markers of lung health change during different hormonal phases of the ovulatory cycle in women. - Determine if men change lung function, respiratory symptoms, or various markers of lung health over time. - Determine if oral contraceptive pills in women stabilize fluctuations in symptoms and improve lung health.
The current dream in CF research is to discover safe drugs that correct the basic defect and prevent lung disease, allowing patients without significant lung damage to live nearly normal lives with a dramatic increase in life expectancy and without the burden of current treatment. The compound VX-770 (Ivacaftor Ò) is hoped to be the first milestone along this way. Progression of lung disease is now so gradual in many centres that sensitive indicators of early lung disease (small airways disease) are critically needed to assess the effects of such new treatments. In this context, assessment of ventilation inhomogeneity by the measurement called Lung clearance index (LCI) seems to be the most promising tool. However, to get approval by health authorities, new measures used in drug evaluation need to fulfill strict criteria. For LCI, the investigators still need to prove its long term significance: How well does the LCI measurement predict the long term lung disease course? Therefore, in this study the investigators want to measure LCI at baseline in a large patient cohort and establish how well it predicts the patients' disease course over the next 2 years.
The purpose of this study is to look at how Alpha-1-antitrypsin (AAT) deficiency and Cystic Fibrosis (CF) affect white blood cells in the lungs, called macrophages, and their ability to work.
Patients with cystic fibrosis (CF) suffer from chronic infections of the lower respiratory tract that can be caused by one or multiple bacteria, including Pseudomonas aeruginosa, which has been particularly problematic to eradicate and been implicated as the major cause of morbidity and mortality in CF patients. Aerosol delivery of antibiotics directly to the lung increases the local concentrations of antibiotic at the site of infection resulting in improved antimicrobial effects compared to systemic administration. Bacterial resistance to current aerosol antibiotic treatments indicate a need for improved therapies to treat CF patients with pulmonary infections caused by multi-drug resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa and other bacteria. High concentrations of MP-376 delivered directly to the lung are projected to have antimicrobial effects on even the most resistant organisms.