View clinical trials related to Respiratory Tract Diseases.
Filter by:This goal of the open-label single dose study is to evaluate and compare the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetic (PK), and immunogenicity of AIO-001 using two different formulations in 16 healthy volunteers.
The goal of this clinical trial is to compare indoor air quality and health in people exposed to air pollution, including possible exposure to wildfire smoke. The study will test the effect of using a do-it-yourself (DIY) air cleaner when air pollution is present to answer the following questions: - Do health outcomes differ between participants who use a DIY PAC and those who use a sham air cleaner? - How effective is the DIY air cleaner in reducing indoor concentrations of fine particles (PM2.5), and volatile organic compounds found in wildfire smoke? OR How effective is the DIY air cleaner in reducing indoor concentrations of fine and coarse particles (i.e., PM 10)? - What are barriers to use of a DIY air cleaner and what factors facilitate its use? Participants will be asked to do the following: - Participate in 5 home visits from study staff between July - October 2023 - Have an air quality sensor placed in the participant's bedroom for the whole study period - Have a small sensor attached to the main door of the participant's house to record when the door is open or closed (important for air quality inside) - Allow researchers to take air and dust samples in the participant's bedroom - Run a DIY air cleaner in the participant's bedroom for at least 6 nights while the participant sleeps - Complete 2 interviews - Allow study staff to collect 3 fingerstick blood samples - Allow study staff to collect 3 samples of fluid from inside the nose - Use the study air cleaner in the participant's bedroom during the study period The investigators will measure air quality in participating homes and measure health outcomes for participants. The investigators will compare outcomes of participants who use a DIY air cleaner with filters that work well to those of participants who use a DIY air cleaner with a placebo filter (one that does not work well to remove the air pollutants of concern). The goal of the study is to see if using the effective air cleaner leads to better health outcomes and indoor air quality.
Pulmonary rehabilitation is an exercise and education programme that helps improve breathlessness and quality of life for people living with lung and breathing problems. It improves exercise levels and breathlessness and is a recommended treatment for people with lung diseases and symptoms. Standard pulmonary rehabilitation programmes involve individuals attending group classes at hospitals or community centres, twice a week for 8 weeks. These classes are supervised by physiotherapists. At the moment, there are long waiting times for pulmonary rehabilitation in the NHS. Some patients may prefer more pulmonary rehabilitation based in their own home. This might be because they find it difficult to travel to classes. Some would like to do more home pulmonary rehabilitation in between supervised classes or continue pulmonary rehabilitation after the 8-week supervised programme. The blending between supervised classes and home pulmonary rehabilitation is known as HYBRID PULMONARY REHABILITATION. Hybrid pulmonary rehabilitation is not being provided routinely in the NHS, but the NHS would like to see it used more as it might help reduce waiting times and give patients more choice on how to access pulmonary rehabilitation. The study will assess the feasibility of a larger study to provide strong evidence on patients' uptake and adherence to the hybrid programme, and the impact on patients' health outcomes and service delivery. The investigators will also look at what measures would be best to use in a larger study. The study will recruit up to 100 patients. These individuals will be aged 18 years or older, have respiratory disease and a referral for pulmonary rehabilitation. Individuals with reasons why they cannot exercise will be excluded. Participants will be provided with an application (App) that can be installed on a mobile phone. This App is called Active+me REMOTE and is made by a company called Aseptika Ltd (www.activ8rlives.com). Active+me REMOTE provides live online, video exercise classes; pre-recorded exercise classes; a walking programme; educational talks; and a care plan personalised for the user. Data will be collected at the beginning and end of the hybrid pulmonary rehabilitation programme and will include routinely collected data as part of usual care. Additional data will be collected via the App and trial surveys. The investigators will ask staff and patients about the experiences of the new way of delivering rehabilitation and explore how cost effective it is.
A pilot Study To investigate the efficacy of a breathing intervention for improving persistent breathlessness due to dysregulated breathing following COVID-19 when compared to usual care.
1. Build a national diagnosis and treatment quality control platform for major respiratory diseases It will establish and improved a "National diagnosis and Treatment quality control Platform for major respiratory diseases", and form a three-level network of diagnosis and treatment quality control for major respiratory diseases with a three-level system structure of "national, provincial and hospital". 2. Promote standardized diagnosis and treatment techniques for major respiratory diseases Relying on the specialized disease collaboration group or innovative unit model, all-round and hierarchical precision training and teaching are carried out to popularize and promote standardized diagnosis and treatment technology schemes for major respiratory diseases, so as to achieve the homogenization of diagnosis and treatment level for major respiratory diseases.
A retrospective study to evaluate the diagnostic performance of an Artificial Intelligence enabled software (ArtiQ.Spiro) in UK primary care spirometry datasets.
Streptococcus pneumoniae infections often cause serious health problems, especially in infants and the elderly. Failure to cover all polysaccharide types of vaccines is a greater problem for adults than for children. The purpose of this study was to preliminarily evaluate the safety and immunogenicity of a recombinant pneumococcal protein vaccine applied to adults aged 50 years and older to provide a basis for subsequent clinical trial design.
The purpose of this retrospective study is to evaluate the effectiveness of CPM nasal spray as part of the treatment of COVID-19 and its impact on clinical symptoms. Two cohort groups will be compared (CPM vs. standard care). The hypothesis to be tested is that patients treated with CPM nasal spray showed more rapid clinical improvement than those treated with standard of care alone. Clinical improvement will be evaluated by the total number of days with the manifestation of COVID-19 symptoms, including cough, nasal congestion, ageusia, and anosmia, among others. The rate of hospitalization between the cohorts will also be evaluated.
The primary purpose of this pragmatic randomized clinical trial is to examine whether the addition of a phone-based multicomponent environmental intervention customized for Houston public housing residents with asthma will result in statistically significant improvements in key measures of health, quality of life, and resilience.
This is a Phase 1/2, open-label first-in-human study of the safety, pharmacokinetics (PK), pharmacodynamics, and anti-tumor activity of BLU-451 monotherapy and BLU-451 in combination with platinum-based chemotherapy (carboplatin and pemetrexed). All participants will receive BLU-451 on a 21-day treatment cycle.