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Active clinical trials for "Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive"

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A Study to Evaluate the Symptoms Over 24 Hours in Patients With Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease...

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

No previous studies have evaluated the frequency and severity of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) symptoms over a period of 24 hours (early morning, daytime and nigth-time symptoms) in stable COPD patients seen in clinical practice in Brazil. COPD is a common disease seen by primary care physicians and one of the most common diseases referred and diagnosed by pulmonologists. According to previous studies, symptoms of COPD can have a substantial impact on patients' quality of life and present a considerable degree of variation for the same degree of airflow limitation. The objective of this study is to learn more about the burden of symptoms in the real-world population of COPD patients in Brazil. With the real life data coming from this study, it will be possible to describe 24-hour COPD symptoms in Brazil and their impact on patients' quality of life and other PROs, the relationship with patients´ behaviour regarding adherence to respiratory medication and burden of COPD symptoms in terms of the impact on health economics. In the present study, the investigators will assess and characterize COPD symptoms over a period of 24 hours, by collecting information about the respiratory symptoms experienced at different times of the day and night in patients with stable COPD under real clinical practice conditions. In addition, the investigators will evaluate the correlation between each of these symptoms and the GOLD classification, adherence to respiratory treatment, level of dyspnea, disease severity, comorbidities and physical activity. Finally, the investigators will assess the relationship between 24h symptoms and direct cost related to treatment and HRU in the previous year to assess the burden of COPD symptoms. The present study is based on a similar protocol applied in Latin-American patients, the LASSYC Study. Extracted data will be used for a Brazilian analysis of these outcomes and may be used in future analyses combined with the results of LASSYC Study for a global view of Latin America.

Completed11 enrollment criteria

Peripheral Endothelial Function in COPD Patients

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

The aim of the study is to assess the peripheral endothelial function in adult COPD (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease) patients and the relationship between the peripheral endothelial function and the pulmonary function.

Completed7 enrollment criteria

SATisfaction and Adherence to COPD Treatment

Pulmonary DiseaseChronic Obstructive

The present study will explore the patients satisfaction to COPD medical treatment (i.e. pharmacological and not pharmacological treatment) in a clinical real-world setting and how the satisfaction for medical treatment is related to clinical parameters, quality of life, illness perception and treatment adherence evolution. Moreover health care resource consumption will be observed during the observation period.

Completed9 enrollment criteria

Randomized Clinical Trial of a Pharmaceutical Care Program in Chronic Patients Users of an Emergency...

Heart FailurePulmonary Disease1 more

The study aims to assess the clinical and economic impact of a pharmaceutical care program initiated in the Emergency Department versus conventional follow-up of patients with decompensated heart failure/COPD.

Completed5 enrollment criteria

Mechanisms of Exercise Intolerance in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

COPD

1: Is endothelium function impaired in COPD? Other chronic cardiovascular diseases are associated with endothelial dysfunction, and the endothelium plays an important role in regulating vascular tone, tissue blood flow, coagulation and the inflammation process. Although the specific causes of endothelial dysfunction remain unclear, physical inactivity, chronic systemic inflammation and smoking are all known to be associated with endothelial abnormality. 2. Is Muscular Sympathetic Nerve Activity (MSNA) increased in COPD? A balanced regulation of blood flow to skeletal muscles may be disturbed by pathophysiology and may therefore contribute to the exercise intolerance and skeletal muscle depletion seen in patients with COPD.Skeletal muscle blood flow is tightly regulated to match tissue oxygen demands and is thus adapted to meet energy requirements. During physical activity, the sympathetic nervous system is activated ("exercise pressor reflex"), resulting in increased ventilation, heart rate and a redistribution of cardiac output from inactive to active tissues. The redistribution of cardiac output to the body organs is heterogeneous. Blood flow to skeletal, respiratory and cardiac muscle increases as exercise intensity increases, whereas blood flow to gastrointestinal, renal and reproductive tissues decreases. As blood pressure during exercise remains largely unchanged, the redistribution of blood flow is caused by changes in vascular conductance. These conductance changes are caused by an overall vasoconstriction induced by the increased sympathetic outflow of noradrenaline (NA), and a vasodilation of vascular beds supplying the working skeletal -, cardiac- and respiratory muscle.

Completed13 enrollment criteria

The SENSOR Study: A Mixed-methods Study of SElf-management Checks to Predict exacerbatioNs of Pseudomonas...

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD)Asthma1 more

The World Health Organisation predicts that lung disease will be the World's third largest killer in the future. This research project is looking to see whether the concept of a "home hospital" using the latest gadgets and iPad technology, can help patients stay well and out of hospital. Portsmouth Hospitals Trust is collaborating with a Company based in the United Kingdom (UK) who has developed a test to predict when people with lung diseases, such as; asthma, COPD and bronchiectasis, who regularly have chest infections, are about to become poorly with another infection - a form of early warning system. The investigators hope that the test will eventually be able to be used by the patient at home daily, to help self-manage their condition. The test measures whether bacteria are present, in sputum, and in what quantity. This information can be used by the patient's healthcare team to consider providing treatment earlier, thus controlling the infection sooner and reducing the patient's symptoms so that patients can stay at home rather than being regularly admitted to hospital. Part of this "early warning system" that has been developed by the UK Company includes the daily measurement of a number of indicators of health. These are usually only measured in hospital or by a General Practitioner, but new devices have been made that are simple enough for everyone to use at home. The investigators will include 30 participants, with non-Cystic Fibrosis (CF) chronic respiratory conditions who will be asked to take daily measurements of their blood pressure, temperature, weight and how well their heart and lungs are working with easy-to-use devices. They will also measure their physically activity with an activity tracker and report their wellness and whether they have taken medication daily. Participants will also be asked to collect a sample of sputum and urine each morning. Taking the samples and measurements should only take between 5-15 minutes each day to carry out. The sputum and urine will be tested at the hospital and will be recorded and analysed, so that the researchers can learn what happens well before a person with these conditions falls sick and needs hospitalisation.

Completed11 enrollment criteria

Observational Study On The Characterization Of 24-Hour Symptoms In Patients With COPD

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

In COPD patients, a distinctive clustering of symptoms in the 3 parts of the day, early morning, day-time and night-time has been observed. These clusters are relevant to shape the health status and to explain the need of care. The objective of the STORICO study is to quantify the intra-day fluctuation of symptoms and to verify whether it: marks selected COPD phenotypes and is stable over time. STORICO is an observational prospective cohort multicenter study. 600 COPD patients >50 years will be enrolled. The multidimensional assessment will cover pattern of symptoms, complete spirometry and DLCO (Diffusing capacity of Lung for Carbon Monoxide ), comorbidity and health status. Based on clinical data, patients will be grouped in clinical phenotypes. Intra-day symptoms fluctuation will by rated by standardized questionnaires and the relationship between clinical/statistical clusters and symptoms fluctuations assessed. Finally, patients will be reassessed at 6 and 12 months, and the 12 month incidence of selected outcomes (frequency of exacerbations, use of health care resources) will be computed. Results are expected to clarify the classificatory and prognostic role of symptoms fluctuations in addition to classical measures of disease status and to compare health status and prognosis of clusters. Intra-day variations and stability of symptoms over time will likely improve our understanding of phenotypic variability of COPD.

Completed15 enrollment criteria

Regeneration of Bronchial Epithelium During Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

COPD

Airway epithelium integrity is essential to maintain its role of mechanical and functional barrier. Recurrent epithelial injuries require a complex mechanism of repair to restore its integrity. In chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), an abnormal airway epithelial repair may participate in airway remodelling. The objective was to determine if airway epithelial wound repair of airway epithelium is abnormal in COPD.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Wireless Assessment of Respiratory and Circulatory Distress in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease...

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary DiseaseDyspnea

For patients admitted to the medical ward, it is usually difficult to predict if their clinical condition will deteriorate, however subtle changes in vital signs are usually present 8 to 24 hours before a life-threatening event such as respiratory failure leading to ICU admission, or unanticipated cardiac arrest. Such adverse trends in clinical observations can be missed, misinterpreted or not appreciated as urgent. New continuous and wearable 24/7 clinical vital parameter monitoring systems offer a unique possibility to identify clinical deterioration before patients progress beyond the point-of-no-return, where adverse events are inevitable. The WARD-COPD project aims to determine the number and duration of cardiopulmonary micro events during the first 4 days after hospital admission with Acute Exacerbation of COPD. We will also test the server installation, develop a database of core data and assess the frequency of artefacts and failure to capture the continuous monitoring signal.

Completed4 enrollment criteria

Molecular, Cytological Features and Genetic Susceptibility of COPD Attributable to Different Environmental...

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

The objective of this study is to investigate molecular, cytological and genetic features of occupational chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) in conditions of different occupational exposures. In order to achieve this goal serum pro-inflammatory cytokines and standard inflammation markers level, hemostasis, cytological analysis of bronchoalveolar lavage fluid and association of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) rs1800470 transforming growing factor β1 (TGF β1) gene, rs1828591 hedgehog interacting protein (HHIP) gene, rs4129267 interleukin 6 receptor (IL-6R) gene, rs1051730 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor 3 (CHRNA3) gene with COPD in subjects exposed to silica dust and in those exposed to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons exhaust will be investigated. The relationship between genotype and phenotype characteristics, such as an inflammation activity, assessed by C-reactive protein (hsCRP) and tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF α) serum concentration, in different occupational COPD groups will be studied. The hypothesis is that the mechanisms underlying disease development and progression are different due to environmental risk factor that reflex in differs in disease attributes - molecular biomarkers, cytology results and genetic susceptibility between COPD due to dust, COPD due to chemicals and COPD in smokers therefore COPD can be subdivided into ecological phenotypes according to environmental risk factor.

Completed18 enrollment criteria
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