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Clinical Trials/NCT02294279
NCT02294279
Completed
Phase 4

The Evaluation of FeNO for Predicting Response to an Inhaled Corticosteroid in Subjects With Non-specific Respiratory Symptoms

Research in Real-Life Ltd1 site in 1 country360 target enrollmentMay 2014
ConditionsAsthma
InterventionsQvar (100 mcg)

Overview

Phase
Phase 4
Intervention
Qvar (100 mcg)
Conditions
Asthma
Sponsor
Research in Real-Life Ltd
Enrollment
360
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
Asthma Control Questionnaire (ACQ)
Status
Completed
Last Updated
9 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

Nitric Oxide is recognized as a biological marker for many chronic airway diseases. It has been standardised for clinical use indicating airway inflammation.

In clinical practice, FeNO can aid confirmation of an asthma diagnosis and can indicate the degree of steroid-responsiveness. This can help guide physician decisions on the initiation of inhaled corticosteroid (ICS) therapy, or adjustment of ICS therapy.

Therefore, FeNO measurement could be particularly useful to confirm an asthma diagnosis in patients with non-specific respiratory symptoms (≥ 6 weeks of cough and/or wheezing and/or chronic dyspnoea) and to assess how likely they are to benefit from corticosteroid treatment.

This study will assess the suitability of FeNO to predict ICS responsiveness in patients with non-specific respiratory symptoms.

Additionally, we would like to determine the suitability of FeNO as a diagnostic tool for asthma in comparison to conventional predictors, e.g. spirometry.

Detailed Description

Randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial with planned enrolment of 264 patients from the UK and Singapore. Eligible patients are 18-80 years old with ≥6 weeks' duration of non-specific respiratory symptoms defined as cough and/or wheeze and/or dyspnoea. Patients with FEV1 \<90% predicted at visit 1 must show reversibility of \<20% at visit 1 or within the prior year. Key exclusion criteria are prior diagnosis of asthma; evidence of concomitant chronic respiratory disease, respiratory tract infection; or known significant risk factor for cough or wheeze. Baseline assessments will include spirometry (FEV1, forced vital capacity) and FeNO measurement. Patients will be provided with a peak flow meter for twice daily measurement throughout the study. At 2 weeks, a clinical assessment and spirometry will be performed to confirm eligibility, and patients will complete four validated questionnaires to assess quality of life, asthma control, and asthma symptoms, including a visual analog scale for bother from asthma symptoms. Eligible patients will then be stratified by baseline FeNO level (normal ≤25, intermediate \>25 to ≤50, or high \>50 ppb); each group will be randomised to receive beclometasone 400 mcg daily or placebo for 6 weeks. An optional blood sample will be collected from consenting patients to assess blood eosinophils. At visit 3, final assessments will include spirometry, FeNO measurement, and all questionnaires. Interaction analysis will be used to determine whether a differential effect exists in response to ICS between FeNO groups.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
May 2014
End Date
August 2016
Last Updated
9 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
All

Investigators

Sponsor
Research in Real-Life Ltd
Responsible Party
Sponsor

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Written informed consent is obtained before conducting any study-related procedures
  • The patient is a man or woman aged 18 to 80 years as of the screening visit
  • The patient is experiencing non-specific respiratory symptoms defined as follows: Cough and/or wheeze and/or chronic dyspnoea for ≥ 6 weeks prior to visit 1
  • Patients displaying an FEV1\< 90% predicted at visit 1, will also need to show a reversibility to a short-acting beta-agonist of \< 20% at visit 1 or within the previous year
  • Women of childbearing potential (post-menarche or less than 2 years post-menopausal or not surgically sterile) must be willing to commit to using a medically accepted method of contraception for the duration of the study. Accepted methods of contraception include: intrauterine devices (IUD), systemic contraception e.g. steroidal contraceptives (oral, implanted transdermal or injected), barrier methods with spermicide, and partner vasectomy

Exclusion Criteria

  • The patient has ever been diagnosed with asthma as evidenced by the UK quality outcome framework approved Read code as well as a reversibility of ≥ 20% predicted
  • The patient has received oral, inhaled or systemic corticosteroids, a leukotriene modifier or long-acting-beta-agonist within four weeks prior to visit
  • All therapy and treatment other than those outlined are permitted during the study
  • The patient has a significant chronic respiratory disorder other than asthma, e.g. COPD (fixed obstruction, post-bronchodilator) cystic fibrosis, severe and untreated bronchiectasis or interstitial lung disease
  • The patient has a significant medical condition that would make it unlikely for the patient to complete the study
  • The patient has a known significant risk factor for cough or wheeze, including but not limited to: taking an ACE inhibitor, severe untreated rhinitis, or significant gastroesophageal reflux disease
  • The patient is asymptomatic (ACQ \< 1) after the initial 2-week assessment
  • The patient has had a respiratory tract infection as judged clinically, within four weeks prior to visit 1, or displays an acute respiratory tract infection at the time of the study
  • The patient is a pregnant woman or intends to get pregnant (Any woman becoming pregnant during the study will be withdrawn from the study)

Arms & Interventions

Active

4 weeks of corticosteroid treatment with QVAR (100mcg), 400 mcg daily; two puffs twice daily

Intervention: Qvar (100 mcg)

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Asthma Control Questionnaire (ACQ)

Time Frame: Baseline and 4 weeks

The Asthma control questionnaire (ACQ) is a seven question (i.e. the top scoring 5 symptoms, daily rescue bronchodilator use and FEV1% pred.), validated tool for assessing asthma control. Patients are asked to recall how their asthma has been during the last 7 days and to evaluate their asthma against 5 symptom questions and a rescue bronchodilator use question on a 6-point scale (0 = no impairment, 6 = maximum impairment). In addition, the research nurse will grade the FEV1 % predicted on a 6 point scale (0 to 6). The questions are equally weighted and ACQ7 score is the mean of the 7 questions, generating a value between 0 (totally controlled) and 6 (severely uncontrolled).

Secondary Outcomes

  • EuroQol 5 dimension questionnaire(Baseline and 4 weeks)
  • Visual Analogue Scale test (VAS) and cough Visual analogue scale test(Baseline and 4 weeks)
  • Spirometry (PEF, FEV1, FVC, FEV1/FVC)(3 days)
  • Eosinophil analysis(1 day)
  • Peak expiratory flow (PEF diary)(From visit 1 till 6 weeks follow-up (2 recordings per day over 6 weeks))
  • Global Evaluation of Treatment Effectiveness Scale (GETE)(1 day)

Study Sites (1)

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