View clinical trials related to Lung Diseases, Interstitial.
Filter by:The main objective is to assess long term safety of treatment with oral nintedanib in patients with Systemic Sclerosis associated Interstitial Lung Disease (SSc-ILD).
We aimed to compare the functional results of the 8th week with the results of the 12th week of the exercise programs applied to the patients with ILD.
Treating and caring for people with long term conditions accounts for a substantial proportion of health care resources. Self-management is advocated as a mechanism that can empower service users with long term conditions to choose healthier options and also transform the relationship between service user and caregivers from one in which the former is a passive recipient of care to one in which they are an active partner in decision-making. Interstitial lung disease (ILD) is one such long term condition. Patients with ILD often express concern about the lack of information on possible rehabilitation programmes and other services that could potentially improve self-management of the disease. In addition, there is a general perception about a lack of co-ordination between health care professionals especially in relation to referral to services for comprehensive management of the disease. Therefore, the needs of patients with ILD and their carers, and possible gaps in service provision need to be explored further. In this study, the investigators propose to explore the needs of ILD patients from all types of ILD and all stages of severity and to also involve carers and clinicians. The investigators will conduct three focus groups for patients and carers and six one-to-one interviews with clinicians to explore perceptions about service gaps and needs in two ILD centres in South and North London, UK. This study will provide valuable information to develop the building blocks of a self-management resource and will enable the investigators to make it specific to the different types of ILD.
This international clinical study will enroll participants with a suspected diagnosis of IPF/ILD. This study will characterize the disease behavior of IPF and ILD in the peri-diagnostic period. This objective will be achieved using a multidimensional approach assessing changes in pulmonary function, measured by daily handheld spirometry and site spirometry as well as assessing physical functional capacity at home (accelerometry) and at site (6-minute walk tests [6MWT]). Daily handheld spirometry or physical functional capacity assessments are not routinely performed in this participant population. By following participants' lung function before and after diagnosis using home spirometry, levels of physical activity, as well as self-assessment data from the participants (patient reported outcomes; PRO), the study would provide potentially more rapid information on disease behavior and eventually progression compared to usual clinic measurements that occur only every 3-6 months. By receiving data from daily handheld spirometry measurements, treating physicians may have an improved chance of detecting earlier and outside of hospital visits a decline in lung function that could potentially lead to improvements in both diagnosis and treatment for participants with IPF/ILD.
A Phase II multi-center, double-blind, parallel group, randomized and placebo-controlled clinical trial addressing the treatment of patients with active and symptomatic Scleroderma-related interstitial lung disease (SSc-ILD).
Interstitial lung disease (ILD) often affects distal lung, and the evaluation of drug distribution to the relevant lung compartments is essential for development of new treatment options. This single center study will utilize samples obtained by transbronchial cryobiopsy (TBCB) procedure to assess the distribution of inhaled drugs in the lungs of the subjects with fibrotic lung disease using mass spectrometry techniques. The study will have a single visit and will include approximately 20 adult subjects with suspected fibrotic ILD and requiring TBCB as part of their diagnostic assessment. This will provide TBCB samples from up to 20 subjects, up to 5 of whom may also provide endobronchial forceps biopsy samples. The study will have 3 phases including screening to check the eligibility, biopsy phase in which all subjects will receive nebulized ipratropium bromide 500 microgram (mcg) for 10 minutes immediately before undergoing bronchoscopy and follow up phase from 7 to 14 days after the procedure. Drug distribution in the lung will be assessed by analyzing biopsy samples collected using mass spectrometry and imaging techniques.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of pirfenidone in participants with fibrosing interstitial lung disease (ILD) who cannot be classified with moderate or high confidence into any other category of fibrosing ILD by multidisciplinary team (MDT) review ("unclassifiable" ILD).
The purpose of this study is to determine whether patient with ILD have altered lung compliance on chest CT before they have macroscopic structural changes on CT.
The purpose of the Lung Institute is to collect and isolate a patient's own cells and platelet rich plasma (PRP) and deliver the product back to the patient the same day. Lung Institute's treatment is limited to self-funded patients with chronic lung disease- chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and restrictive lung diseases such as pulmonary fibrosis (PF) and interstitial lung disease (ILD). The patient's cells and platelet rich plasma are harvested through venous or bone marrow collection techniques. The hypothesized outcomes of therapy are safety and minimization of adverse events, a perceived improvement in the patient's lung condition (to be determined by their perceived quality of life), an improvement in the FEV1 among COPD patients, the ability to reduce supplemental oxygen use, the ability to function well without the use of rescue inhalers, reduction of secondary pulmonary infections, reduction in emergency room visits and exacerbations related to their disease.
The purpose of the Lung Institute is to collect and isolate a patient's own cells and platelet rich plasma (PRP) and deliver the product back to the patient same-day. Lung Institute's treatment is limited to self- funded patients with chronic lung disease - chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and interstitial lung disease (ILD). The patient's cells and platelet rich plasma are collected through venous harvesting. The hypothesized outcomes of Lung Institute therapy are safety and minimization of adverse events, a perceived improvement in the patient's lung condition (to be determined by their ability to be more physically active; walking greater distances with or without oxygen and improved quality of life scales), an improvement in the FEV1 among COPD patients, the ability to reduce their use of oxygen and possibly to stop it., the ability to function well without the use of rescue inhalers, reduction or ceasing of secondary pulmonary infections, reduction in emergency room visits and exacerbations related to their disease.