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Active clinical trials for "Asthma"

Results 331-340 of 3412

Longitudinal Observational Study of Severe Asthma

Asthma

Background: - Asthma is a lung condition that causes difficulty breathing and decreased lung function. Some people with asthma have more severe disease symptoms. They may be less responsive to standard treatments such as steroids. Researchers want to compare severe asthmatics with mild or moderate asthmatics or people without asthma over a long period. This information may help identify new treatments for people whose asthma is not well controlled by standard medications. Objectives: - To compare severe asthmatics with mild or moderate asthmatics, and healthy volunteers, to study the progression and outcomes of the disease. Eligibility: Individuals at least 18 years of age who have been diagnosed with asthma for at least 1 year. Healthy volunteers at least 18 years of age. Design: This study will involve an initial visit to the NIH Clinical Center for all participants. Selected participants may be asked to return for repeat visits over a number of years. The test results from participants with asthma will be compared with those from the healthy volunteers. All participants will be screened with a physical exam and medical history. Participants may (but will not necessarily) have the following tests at each visit: Complete medical history and physical exam Blood, urine, sputum, and nasal cell samples Breath tests and heart and lung function tests Six-minute walk test to measure ability to exercise Imaging studies such as chest x-rays, bone density scans, and sinus scans Allergy skin testing Vocal cord exam Overnight sleep study Participants may remain on the study for as long as they are willing to participate and do not develop health problems that will interfere with the study.

Recruiting12 enrollment criteria

Pediatric Arm of DZL All Age Asthma Cohort

AsthmaWheeze2 more

Despite its common occurrence, still little is known about pathomechanisms determining different wheeze and asthma trajectories and phenotypes in children, and those beginning in adulthood. Therefore, deciphering underlying determinants for different childhood and adult asthma phenotypes is urgently needed to develop personalized treatment approaches targeting distinct underlying mechanisms. Thereby, secondary prevention early in the disease process can also be achieved. The decoding of such mechanisms and their translation to the individual patient is the aim of the Disease Area Asthma Allergy of the 'German Centre for Lung Research' (DZL).

Recruiting15 enrollment criteria

Randomized Trial: Maternal Vitamin D Supplementation to Prevent Childhood Asthma (VDAART)

Asthma

Vitamin D supplementation given to pregnant women will prevent asthma in their offspring and children.

Active12 enrollment criteria

Use of a Probiotic Supplement to Prevent Asthma in Infants

Asthma

The goal of the study is to understand the mechanisms of how antigen presentation affects the developing immune system and subsequently affects susceptibility to, or protects against, asthma development. This randomized controlled study will test the effectiveness of daily supplementation of Lactobacillus GG for the first 6 months of life on the early immunological development of asthma.

Active6 enrollment criteria

The Breathe Well Program for Adults With Asthma

Asthma

The Breathe Well Study is a pragmatic, controlled trial to assess the effectiveness, cost-effectiveness, and implementation of the Breathe Well intervention, which combines evidence-based EHR and interactive behavior-change technologies (IBCT) and team-based care to improve asthma outcomes.

Active7 enrollment criteria

Clinic Navigation and Home Visits to Improve Guideline-based Care and Outcomes in Low Income Minority...

Asthma

Asthma-related deaths are more numerous among low-income minority patients and older adults with chronic diseases. Guidelines for asthma management have not addressed the needs of these groups. The investigators recently demonstrated the feasibility, acceptability, and evidence of effectiveness of two interventions to improve access to care, patient-provider communication, and asthma outcomes: 1) CI: clinic intervention using a patient advocate to prepare for, attend, and confirm understanding of an office visit, and 2) HV: home visits for care coordination and informing clinicians of home barriers to managing asthma is associated with subsequent improvement in asthma outcomes. This project explores whether these interventions can be combined for greater effectiveness, delivery of guideline-based asthma care, and outcomes in low-income minority patients. In a randomized controlled factorial trial, 400 adults with uncontrolled asthma living in low-income urban neighborhoods are offered 18-months' participation: 12 months of clinical intervention and 6 months of evaluation to monitor sustainability of interventions and outcomes. Patients will be randomized to 1) a patient advocate and (2) an advocate and home visits, (3) an advocate and real-time feedback to the asthma provider (clinician) at each clinic visit of guidelines-relevant relevant information, and 4) (2), and (3). Interventions will be delivered by a community health worker. The study estimates Specific Aim 1: improvement over time of within-group (before-after in four groups) asthma outcomes (asthma control, quality of life, ED visits, hospitalizations, prednisone bursts) Specific Aim 2: across group differences in improvement over time in asthma outcomes; Specific Aim 3: the costs associated with each of the interventions. A cost-offset analysis will determine which intervention costs are offset by savings attributable to reductions in ED, hospitalization or other visits for asthma control and other outcomes. Exploratory Aim: changes in behavior from the interventions using interviews of clinicians and patients. Investigators hypothesize that improved outcomes in asthma patients will result from enhanced patient-clinician communication, clinician attention to home environmental exposures, and clinician consideration of the guidelines, at a program cost offset by lower patient health care utilization.

Active9 enrollment criteria

Rural Asthma Effectiveness Study

Asthma

The investigators will test if their intervention, Asthma Self-Management for Adolescents (ASMA), an 8-week, high school-based intervention for teenagers, improves asthma in rural high school students with uncontrolled asthma when delivered by CHWs. The investigators will also test the cost-effectiveness of ASMA, and examine the barriers and facilitators of ASMA's widespread implementation.

Active4 enrollment criteria

Study in Adult Patients With Moderate to Severe Asthma

Asthma

The CLI-01535AA02-2 Study is an exploratory study designed to compare two pressurised metered Dose inhalers on subject's perception of asthma symptoms.

Active20 enrollment criteria

Asthma Link: A Real World Application of School Supervised Asthma Therapy

Childhood Asthma

The goal of this study is to assess the feasibility of a clinical trial to evaluate the impact and process of deploying school-supervised asthma therapy in a real-world setting for children with poorly controlled asthma (aged 6-17 years).

Active31 enrollment criteria

Corticosteroids/β2-agonists in Hair in Asthmatic Patients (CorticHair)

Asthma

This feasibility study will be open-label with two dose groups: patients receiving budesonide/formoterol Turbuhaler® at a total daily dose [400 to 800 µg[ (group 1) and patients receiving a total daily dose ≥800 µg/day (group 2) to investigate whether there is a relationship between dose and hair concentration. The objective of this feasibility study is to determine if the product administered to the patient is detectable and quantifiable in hair in order to have a mean to monitor adherence to the treatment. This study does not in any way evaluate the efficacy or safety of the medicinal product, which will be used in accordance with its marketing authorization.

Active20 enrollment criteria
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