View clinical trials related to Interstitial Lung Disease.
Filter by:The goal of this mixed methods study is to learn about cranial electrotherapy stimulation (CES) using Alpha-Stim AID in anxiety related to breathlessness in advanced lung diseases. The main question[s] it aims to answer are: - Is CES using Alpha-Stim AID acceptable and tolerable as a potential treatment in the management of anxiety in patients who experience breathlessness due to advanced chronic respiratory disease? - What are the key factors that will inform the design of a study to examine its potential clinical effectiveness? Participants will choose whether they want to trial the CES for eight weeks or be in a parallel control group. They will complete daily diaries, questionnaires about anxiety, breathlessness, sleep, quality of life and depression, and an end of study qualitative interview. Researchers will compare those using the CES and those receiving standard care to see if there are any indications of difference in anxiety and other symptoms experienced.
Living with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) or interstitial lung disease (ILD) imposes enormous daily challenges, especially at advanced stages, not just to patients but also to informal caregivers. Their needs are not fully addressed by disease-modifying treatments. A key strategy to improve their well-being is the early integration of palliative care into routine management of COPD and ILD. Pulmonary rehabilitation (PR), one of the most well-established and cost-effective interventions in chronic respiratory diseases may be a suitable venue for this approach. The main goal of this randomised controlled study is to explore the effects of palliative care education as part of PR in people with COPD or ILD and informal caregivers. The primary question to be addressed is: "Does integrating education about palliative care in PR improve knowledge on this subject?". The investigators will compare PR with palliative care education (experimental) with traditional PR (control) in people with COPD or ILD and informal caregivers. The intervention will include an education session about palliative care, a "Peer-to-peer session", a "Get-apart session" and online sessions. A mixed-methods approach will be used to evaluate the outcomes. This study will provide an evidence-based insight into personalised PR with palliative care education for people with COPD or ILD and informal caregivers.
The goal of this NIH-sponsored study is to characterize three biomarkers derived from 129Xe gas exchange MRI and to understand how they change in response to interventions.
Patients with fibrotic insterstitial lung disease (ILD) participating in inpatient rehabilitation or in outpatient pulmonary care will be invited to participate in this observational study. Patients will fill out questionnaire regarding quality of life and symptoms at baseline and follow-up (at the end of rehabilitation or after the second outpatient ILD consultation). Additionally, clinical data obtained in clinical routine or for the IIP registry will be used for this project. The aim is to assess changes in self-efficacy and quality of life over time and to establish a control cohort for a later feasibility study on a educational and self-management intervention (currently in planning).
Malnutrition occurs when the body receives too few nutrients, resulting in health problems such as weight loss. The consequences of malnutrition are worrying as they include lung failure, infection, and pressure ulcers. Interstitial Lung Disease (ILD) is a term used for a group of diseases which can cause scarring of the lungs. Having ILD can cause malnutrition due to the lungs working hard and burning off energy. Additionally, medications called anti-fibrotic agents are used to slow disease progression. However, side effects include poor appetite, diarrhoea, nausea, vomiting and weight loss which can result in malnutrition. Malnutrition occurs in ILD in approximately half of patients. This is important because the main signs of malnutrition such as weight loss and a low Body Mass Index (BMI), which takes into consideration your weight against your height, are linked with worse outcomes in ILD. Malnutrition in ILD can also reduce eligibility for lung transplant and can impact tolerability of anti-fibrotic agents. Research into treatment of malnutrition in ILD is limited. Dietitians play a key role in diagnosis and treatment of malnutrition. This is because dietary counselling by a dietitian has been shown to increase quality of life and intake of energy in other chronic diseases. There are currently no studies documenting the benefits of dietetic intervention in patients with ILD. We propose to undertake the first feasibility study in this area. A feasibility study is a first step trial which investigates whether a study can & should be done. The main aims of this study are: 1. How easy it is to recruit ILD patients to see a dietitian 2. Whether patients will attend dietetic appointments 3. Whether food/nutrient intake is increased following dietetic intervention 4. How acceptable is dietetic intervention to ILD patients As well as these main aims, this study will also provide initial information about whether dietetic intervention stabilises weight, BMI & quality of life.
This single-center, retrospective cohort study was conducted to determine whether ANCA-ILD spectrum share the same clinical manifestations and outcome with CTD feature disease spectrum.
To establish a simplified approach for assessment of severity of interstitial lung disease by evaluating the relationship between HRCT findings, the clinical severity score,spirometry and quality of life.
Integrating Molecular, Genomic, Morphology and Environmental Features to Improve Precision Diagnosis and Treatment in Interstitial Lung Diseases (PRECISION-ILD) Background: Interstitial Lung Diseases (ILDs) are a heterogeneous group of >100 different, rare diseases, which share the fate of progressive scarring and, ultimately, death. Two anti-fibrotic drugs have demonstrated to slow-down fibrotic progression and steroids/immunosuppressants are commonly used for inflammatory-driven ILDs. However, patient's response to therapeutic options is variable and unpredictable. Similarly, setting a correct diagnosis is difficult in most cases, especially when patients are too sick for invasive procedures. Objectives: (1) To investigate the differences and commonalities in genetic, genomic and environmental exposures/lifestyle in fibrotic ILDs depending on the entity, disease behavior (progressive fibrosis) and treatment response; (2) To integrate the biomarkers that most impact on prognosis and treatment response in diagnostic algorithms; and (3) To explore the feasibility and cost of implementing a P4 strategy in clinical practice for fibrotic ILDs. Methods: The investigators will extend, update and unify existing ILD cohorts (Spanish SEPAR ILD Reg, Observatory IPF.cat, CIBERES IPF and Familial ILD cohorts) in whom the researchers will: (1) record demographic, epidemiological, clinical, physiological and lung morphology (radiological +/- histological) information; (2) obtain genetic variation, telomere length, and serum protein markers; (3) investigate environmental exposures (including air-pollution), (4) apply to integrative analytical methods to identify endotypes, predictive biomarkers of disease trajectories, theragnostic biomarkers and new therapeutic targets. Results (5) will be validated in other fibrotic ILD cohorts (e.g.EuILDRegistry, Mexican fibrotic ILD Registry). Besides, the investigators will explore how to translate this P4 medicine approach in clinical practice; (6) implementing a predictive score for prognosis and improving the diagnostic approach through biological data to reduce invasive procedures, and (7) estimate educational requirement and potential health cost implications. Viability:This project is viable because: (1) cohorts already exist and can be expanded and updated; (2) investigators have ample expertise in translational research and actively participate in ILD consortia; (3) required knowledge and methodology is already in being used by the consortium. Clinical relevance: Due to the lethality, high social and economic burden of fibrotic ILDs, identifying the best diagnostic and therapeutic approach through preventive, personalized and precise measures is a unique opportunity to improve survival in these patients and efficiency of health-care resources.
Although there are numerous data demonstrating the impact of Interstitial Lung Disease (ILD) on respiratory functions, there is a lack of studies investigating the effects of respiratory functions on parameters such as sleep quality, dyspnea, and fatigue. The primary objective of the study is to examine the influence of changes in respiratory muscle functions in ILD on sleep quality, dyspnea, and fatigue parameters. The secondary objective is to investigate the effects of respiratory muscle functions in ILD on parameters such as cough, pain, exercise capacity, peripheral muscle strength, anxiety, depression, and quality of life.
In this double-blind phase II randomized controlled trial, patients with lung cancer or ≤2 oligometastatic pulmonary lesions and a concomitant diagnosis of ILD who are planned for radical Radiation Therapy (RT) will be randomized using a 2 x 2 factorial design to oral N-acetylcysteine (NAC) versus placebo, and also to short course corticosteroids versus placebo.