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Respiration Disorders clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05097677 Recruiting - Covid19 Clinical Trials

Follow-up of Covid-19 Long Term Sequelae

Start date: April 16, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

The protocol, in accordance with the objectives of ORCHESTRA project - Work Package 2, aims at investigating the characteristics and determinants of COVID-19 long-term sequelae. This goal will be reached through the harmonization of follow-up strategies across the participating cohorts to allow a standardized collection of data on COVID-19 long-term sequelae. The result will be a platform including a set of data and biomaterials from large scale international cohorts, that will be uniformly recorded, prospectively tracked and analysed. The ultimate goal will be that of providing evidence to contribute to the optimization and improvement of the management and prevention of COVID-19 sequelae. The follow-up will be organized in multiple levels of tests, according to the capability of each cohort, and will include questionnaires to collect demographic, epidemiological and clinical data, physical examination, radiological exams and biological sampling. The long-term follow-up will also allow the assessment of long-term immunological response to SARS-CoV-2 infection and its association to the vaccination and to different treatment strategies, including monoclonal antibodies.

NCT ID: NCT05064631 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Respiratory Tract Infections

Bacterial Lysate In Preventing Asthma

BLIPA
Start date: January 12, 2022
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Bronchiolitis is a common viral infection of the small airways of infants and some affected infants will require hospital admission. Severe bronchiolitis is a marker for greatly increased risk of developing both preschool wheeze and subsequent school age asthma. Since epidemiological studies suggest that exposure to microbial products protects against preschool wheeze, lysates of bacteria may prevent the development of wheeze after bronchiolitis, with long-term beneficial consequences. BLIPA is a phase 2b, randomised, double blind, placebo-controlled study, investigating the efficacy superiority of bacterial lysate (Broncho Vaxom) capsules over placebo, in reducing wheeze in infants after severe bronchiolitis. The primary end point of the study is parent-reported, healthcare-professional confirmed wheeze at 19-24 months. The study aims to test bacterial lysate capsules (3.5mg over 24 months) for safety, efficacy, and to advance mechanistic understanding of its action.

NCT ID: NCT05064605 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Chronic Respiratory Disease

Pharmacological Evaluation of Antifungal in Chronic Pulmonary Aspergillosis

EPAR-APC
Start date: October 1, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

At present, pulmonary diffusion and target antifungal concentrations for APC in patients with sarcoidosis or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) are unknown.

NCT ID: NCT05063214 Recruiting - Clinical trials for SARS-CoV-2 Acute Respiratory Disease

Muscle Evaluation of Patients Infected by the Coronavirus

Start date: September 30, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

Patients with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) presents risk to develop muscle weakness associated with prolonged period of mechanical ventilation support and hospital stay.

NCT ID: NCT05042063 Recruiting - Asthma Clinical Trials

Acoustic Cough Monitoring for the Management of Patients With Known Respiratory Disease

Start date: September 15, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study pretends to evaluate the potential use of Hyfe Cough Tracker (Hyfe) to screen for, diagnose, and support the clinical management of patients with respiratory diseases, while enriching a dataset of disease-specific annotated coughs, for further refinement of similar systems.

NCT ID: NCT05031455 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Aspirin-exacerbated Respiratory Disease

Mechanisms of Dupilumab in AERD

Start date: March 25, 2024
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Aspirin-Exacerbated Respiratory Disease (AERD), although uncommon in the general population, is an important phenotype of severe asthma and nasal polyposis where it occurs in 15% of severe asthmatics, and up to 30% of those with nasal polyposis. An important therapy for AERD is aspirin therapy after desensitization (ADAT). This is an inexpensive and proven therapy to improve the burden of sinus disease in AERD. Aspirin desensitization is the mechanism by which tolerance is induced in AERD patients. This is a 1-2 day outpatient procedure whereby increasing doses of aspirin are administered and the patients invariably experience some degree of hypersensitivity reactions. It is important to understand the effect of medications on the aspirin desensitization. It is known that the leukotriene modifier medications decrease the severity of the reactions in AERD. Other treatments such as antihistamines and the biologic agent omalizumab might have an effect on either blocking or blunting reactivity in AERD during desensitization. Dupilumab is a new respiratory biologic approved for atopic dermatitis, eosinophilic asthma and nasal polyposis. As such, it is well situated to be used for many AERD patients whose disease cannot be well controlled. The effect of dupilumab on the aspirin desensitization process and reaction is unknown and is the topic of this investigation. The primary objective is to determine the effect of dupilumab on reactions during aspirin challenge/desensitization.

NCT ID: NCT05028023 Recruiting - Tracheal Stenosis Clinical Trials

Tracheal Dilatation in Pediatric Patients With Acquired Tracheal Stenosis, and the Effects of Apneic Oxygenation

Start date: October 21, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The study presents an alternative method of tracheal dilatation in pediatric patients with acquired tracheal stenosis. Dilatation is performed by the use of balloon catheter connected with manometer, that is bronchoscopic guided into trachea in the stenotic area, through the wide canal of supraglottic device i-Gel. Every dilatation cession consists of three consequent tracheal balloon dilatations of maximum 3 minutes duration each, followed by 10-15minutes interval of controlled ventilation. The balloon is inflated for 60 seconds to reach predefined pressure, and then deflated. This method is minimal traumatic for tracheal mucosa, and application of several dilatation procedures every 2-3months, in pediatric patients with acquired tracheal stenosis, may lead to a relative reopening of trachea and recession of clinical symptoms.For the right performance of the dilatation procedure, patients receive general anesthesia with cessation of spontaneous ventilation. During procedure, controlled ventilation-oxygenation is impossible, because the i-Gel canal is occupied by bronchoscope and balloon catheter, so patients will remain apneic for a short period of time. For pediatric patients is important to perform proper preoxygenation prior to procedure, and to maintain oxygenation as long as possible during procedure. This is achieved by application of apneic oxygenation, through a small catheter, connected to high flow oxygen. Participants are exposed during first dilation to no oxygenation, while during second and third dilatation to apneic oxygenation. Aim of the study is to investigate primarily whether application of apneic oxygenation, in pediatric patients during tracheal balloon dilatation, maintains regional cerebral oxygen saturation rSO2 in significant higher levels, compared with no application of oxygenation. rSO2 levels are a sensitive index of oxygenation efficacy of the brain, accordingly this refers to a safe procedure. Secondary issues are whether application of apneic oxygenation maintains pulse oximetry SpO2 and artierial oxygen partial pressure PaO2 in higher levels, and what are the effects on arterial carbon dioxide partial pressure PaCO2 and on haemodynamic parameters (heart rate, blood pressure), compared with no application of apneic oxygenation.

NCT ID: NCT05013944 Recruiting - Neoplasms Clinical Trials

AnovaOS Network Powered Patient Registry

Start date: September 1, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

The objective of this study is the development, implementation and management of a registry of patient data that captures clinically meaningful, real-world, data on the diagnosis, nature, course of infection, treatment(s) and outcomes in patients with complex disease globally.

NCT ID: NCT04963192 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Integrated Management of Chronic Respiratory Diseases

eMEUSE-SANTE
Start date: September 10, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Chronic respiratory diseases such as obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSA) and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) constitute a major public health problem, due to their high prevalence, but especially because of their cardiovascular and metabolic morbidity and mortality and the associated costs for the health system. The organization of long-term management of these diseases is now part of the e-health process, digital health with the use of massive "big data" generated by care and follow-up. Therapeutic patient education and the integration of connected objects will allow personalized therapeutic education support with interventions by local medical staff adapted to the needs of the patients. This will also allow to objectify the effect of treatments such as continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) for OSA or non-invasive ventilation (NIV) and/or oxygen therapy for COPD, not only on the prevention of respiratory decompensation but also on cardiovascular and metabolic risk factors which are major elements of the prognosis. This project will therefore make it possible to demonstrate the feasibility and to deploy a multi-actor care pathway in the territory. The investigators propose a prospective clinical study, conducted at the Verdun Hospital, with the main objective of studying the evolution of the quality of life of patients with a chronic respiratory pathology, during an integrated management at home for 6 months. The secondary objectives: - To study the evolution of the following parameters, before treatment (at inclusion) and after 6 months of integrated management: 1. Treatment compliance (CPAP or NIV/oxygen therapy) 2. Physical activity 3. Weight 4. Mean arterial pressure 5. Oxygen saturation, heart rate and respiratory rate for COPD patients 6. Severity of COPD for the patients concerned 7. Daytime sleepiness 8. Fatigue 9. Patient acceptability of the use of connected objects - To analyze the trajectories of the measures collected throughout the integrated management to identify specific profiles. - To analyze the daily data of the different connected objects and treatments with regard to the patients' profiles (according to age, gender, comorbidities, OSA or COPD group).

NCT ID: NCT04929691 Recruiting - Clinical trials for COVID-19 Respiratory Infection

The CircumVent Project: A CPAP/O2 Helmet Solution for Non-Invasive Ventilation Among Patients With COVID-19

CircumVent
Start date: November 13, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of the CircumVent Project is to evaluate the feasibility, adaptability and acceptability of a CPAP/O2 helmet solution for non-invasive ventilation among patients with COVID-19 and health workers in eight COVID-19 treatment and isolation centers in Nigeria.