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Mechanistic Study of Inspiratory Training in Childhood Asthma (MICA)

Not Applicable
Recruiting
Conditions
Asthma in Children
Obesity
Pediatric Obesity
Pediatric Asthma
Interventions
Device: Pro2 - High Dose - 75% of participant's MIP
Device: Pro2 - Low Dose - 40% of participant's MIP
Device: Pro2 - SHAM - 15% of participant's MIP
Registration Number
NCT05945355
Lead Sponsor
Duke University
Brief Summary

This is single-center cross-sectional mechanistic study in lean and obese children with moderate-severe asthma, followed by a randomized, SHAM-controlled trial of Inspiratory Training (IT). The primary outcome is to describe the contributions of inspiratory muscle dysfunction (IMD) and Small Airway Dysfunction (SAD) to obesity-related versus non-obesity-related asthma. The study will involve training (IT) for 8 weeks at three intensity levels (SHAM, low and high). Target dose: 150 inspirations three times weekly. The population includes 6 to 17-year-old children with moderate to severe asthma and with a body mass index qualifying as normal habitus (BMI 5th to 84th CDC percentile) or obese habitus (≥95th percentile BMI and less than 170% of the 95th CDC percentile). Participants will be involved for 10 weeks. The investigators will use analysis of covariance (ANCOVA) to estimate and test the difference in mean values of baseline measures between obese and non-obese cohorts. Covariates will include age, sex (male/female), race/ethnicity, baseline asthma severity (NAEPP step 2 vs ≥3), and atopy status

Detailed Description

Cross-sectional analytic study of pulmonary mechanics comparing lean and obese children with asthma followed by a randomized, SHAM-controlled 3-arm intervention trial of inspiratory training on small airway dysfunction and inspiratory muscle function.

The central objective of the MICA (Mechanistic Study of Inspiratory Training in Childhood Asthma) study is to assess key respiratory mechanisms in 6-17 year olds with symptomatic asthma (with and without obesity) in response to IT. Our central hypothesis is that obesity promotes dyspnea and worse asthma control via inspiratory muscle fatigue/dysfunction (IMD) and small airway dysfunction (SAD), and that IT will improve inspiratory muscle function and small airway measures.

The sample size calculations and main analyses for the IT trial are designed as a traditional parallel arm intervention trial (any dose IT vs. SHAM control) with visits 1-2 serving as the baseline evaluation and the main IT endpoints being collected at the 8-week visit.

In depth phenotyping involving measures of respiratory mechanics and muscle functioning and a RCT involving inspiratory training will address these objectives.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
76
Inclusion Criteria
  • 6-17 years of age
  • Documented clinician-diagnosed asthma
  • Currently requiring 2 or more controller prescriptions to treat disease (i.e. moderate to severe persistent disease)
  • Either obese (≥95th percentile BMI and less than 170% of the 95th CDC percentile) or have a normal BMI (BMI 5th to 84th CDC percentile)
Exclusion Criteria
  • ACT (asthma control test) score <17
  • Ever intubated for asthma
  • FEV1 < 50% of predicted at enrollment
  • Currently pregnant
  • Legal guardian unable to consent in English or Spanish
  • Any major chronic illness that, in the opinion of the PI, would interfere with participation
  • Younger than 6 years of age

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Active High Dose inspiratory muscle rehabilitation (IMR) groupPro2 - High Dose - 75% of participant's MIPEach participant will be provided a PrO2™ device and trained on its use as well as its accompanying PrO2 Fit™ app. Participants will be instructed to inspire forcefully through PrO2™ until the device signals that the user has achieved the target resistance (via audible alarm and visible light signal). The research team will implement biofeedback signals at a specific inspiratory resistance to provide precise and individualized training target. Successful IMR repetitions will require that subjects achieve a pressure target that is 75% of their MIP (maximum inspiratory pressure).
Active Low Dose inspiratory muscle rehabilitation (IMR) groupPro2 - Low Dose - 40% of participant's MIPEach participant will be provided a PrO2™ device and trained on its use as well as its accompanying PrO2 Fit™ app. Participants will be instructed to inspire forcefully through PrO2™ until the device signals that the user has achieved the target resistance (via audible alarm and visible light signal). The research team will implement biofeedback signals at a specific inspiratory resistance to provide precise and individualized training target. Successful IMR repetitions will require that subjects achieve a pressure target that is 40% of their MIP (maximum inspiratory pressure).
SHAMPro2 - SHAM - 15% of participant's MIPEach participant will be provided a PrO2™ device and trained on its use as well as its accompanying PrO2 Fit™ app. Participants will be instructed to inspire forcefully through PrO2™ until the device signals that the user has achieved the target resistance (via audible alarm and visible light signal). The research team will implement biofeedback signals at a specific inspiratory resistance to provide precise and individualized training target. Successful IMR repetitions will require that subjects achieve a pressure target that is 15% of their MIP (maximum inspiratory pressure).
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Number of participants with inspiratory muscle dysfunction in obesity-related versus non-obesity-related asthma10 weeks
Number of participants with small airway dysfunction in obesity-related versus non-obesity-related asthma10 weeks
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Inspiratory muscle endurance (sustained maximal inspiratory pressure)10 weeks

Trial Locations

Locations (2)

Duke Health Center Creekstone

🇺🇸

Durham, North Carolina, United States

Duke Healthy Lifestyles Clinic

🇺🇸

Durham, North Carolina, United States

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