4D Medical X-ray Velocimetry for Bronchoscopic Lung Volume Reduction Targeting
CopdEmphysema1 moreThis study will investigate the utility of 4D Medical's X-ray Velocimetry (XV) imaging analysis software for the detection of hyperinflation, and compare endobronchial valve placement outcomes with predictive indices obtained utilizing this technique.
Study on the Influence of Climatic and Environmental Factors on Respiratory Diseases in Sanya, Hainan...
AsthmaAllergic Rhinitis7 moreTo investigate the Influence of Climatic and Environmental Factors on Respiratory or Allergic Diseases in Sanya.
BROnchoalveolar Investigations of Never-smokers With Chronic Obstruction From the Swedish CardioPulmonary...
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary DiseaseEmphysema5 moreObstructive lung disease is an increasing global health problem of pandemic proportions, with COPD alone affecting >10% of the population. Smoking is the main and most well studies risk factor for developing COPD. However, chronic airway obstruction also in never-smoking populations has recently been recognized as an increasing health problem. In the clinical segment (PI: Prof. C. Magnus Skold), 1000 subjects from the Swedish national SCAPIS study will be clinically well characterized in one of the six Swedish University Hospital Respiratory clinics (clinical site PIs: Anders Andersson, Leif Bjermer, Anders Blomberg, Christer Janson, Lennart Persson, Magnus Skold). This first screening includes all never-smokers with COPD identified in the SCAPIS study. A subset of 300 subjects from the groups of Healthy never-smokers, current-smokers with normal lung function, current-smokers with COPD, ex-smokers with COPD, and never-smokers with COPD will be selected for the Bronchoscopy segment, were sampling will be performed from a number of anatomical locations, including bronchial biopsies, airway epithelial brushings, and bronchoalveolar lavage. Serum, plasma, and urine samples will also be collected. In the systems medicine segment (PI: Assoc. prof Asa M. Wheelock), alterations at the epigenetic, mRNA, microRNA, proteome, metabolome and microbiome level will be performed from multiple lung compartments (airway epithelium, alveolar macrophages, exosomes, and bronchoalveolar exudates). By means of biostatistics and bioinformatics approaches, specific mediators and molecular pathways critical in the pathological mechanisms of obstructive lung disease related to never-smoker disease phenotypes will be identified. In the immunohistochemistry segment (PI: Prof. Jonas Erjefalt), a number of molecules of relevance for disease pathology will be investigated in bronchial biopsies collected from the 300 subjects in the Bronchoscopy segment.
Assessing the DIAphragM Before ANd After Endobronchial Valve Treatment
EmphysemaRationale: The diaphragm is the principal respiratory muscle, which separates the thorax from the abdomen. Hyperinflation of the lung places the diaphragm at a mechanical disadvantage, shortens its operating length and changes the mechanical arrangement of costal and crural components of the diaphragm and consequently decrease the tension that can be developed and the amount of transdiaphragmatic pressure that can be produced. Reducing the lung hyperinflation could improve the diaphragm function mechanically. One of the treatments to reduces lung hyperinflation is the bronchoscopic treatment using endobronchial valves. To our knowledge the change in diaphragm function after bronchoscopic endobronchial valve treatment was never investigated. Objective: To investigate the change in diaphragm function after bronchoscopic lung volume reduction treatment with endobronchial valves (EBV). Study design: Observational study in which the study population will be asked to perform some additional test during regular visits for the bronchoscopic lung volume reduction treatment with valves. Main study parameters: Change in diaphragm function 6 week after EBV treatment measured by ultrasound. The main outcome will be diaphragm motion (difference between maximum in- and expiration).
COPD Patient-Powered Research Network
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary DisorderChronic Obstructive Lung Disease2 moreThe COPD Patient-Powered Research Network (COPD PPRN) is a patient research registry with the goal of enrolling 75,000 or more COPD patients and those at risk who are willing to share their heath information over several years and participate in research. The COPD PPRN has built an online platform to allow volunteers to enroll electronically, complete surveys, be contacted about studies they qualify for and become connected to COPD resources. The goal of the registry is to speed research to find better treatments for COPD and ultimately a cure.
Maximizing Benefit of Lung Cancer Screening Incidental Findings of Cardiovascular, Respiratory and...
Coronary DiseaseEmphysema or COPD1 moreThe investigators will implement a patient-centered outcomes tool for participants in lung cancer screening programs that receive clinically important incidental findings relevant to heart, breast and lung health. The study objective is to evaluate participant response and clinical follow-up following implementation of a patient-centered incidental findings communication tool.
A Prospective Multicenter Clinical Study to Evaluate the Safety and Effectiveness of the OL-BF-001...
EmphysemaThis is a multicenter,single-arm,open-label study designed to evaluate improvement of lung function and safety after treatment with OL-BF-001 for severe emphysema. OL-BF-001 consists of a bronchial valve, deployment catheter, loader and airway sizing kit. A bronchial valve is a small, umbrella-shaped, one-way valve that is placed inside the airways of one lung. It is used to redirect air from the less healthy to the more healthy parts of the lung. This helps to reduce over-inflation and may improve overall lung function and quality of life for people living with emphysema.
Study of COPD Subgroups and Biomarkers
COPDChronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease2 moreSPIROMICS I and SPIROMICS II are observational studies of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD). SPIROMICS I had two main aims: (1) To find groups of patients with COPD who share certain characteristics; (2) To find new ways of measuring whether or not COPD is getting worse and so provide new ways of testing whether a new treatment is working. SPIROMICS II has three primary aims. Aim 1 is to define the natural history of "Smokers with symptoms despite preserved spirometry" and characterize the airway mucus abnormalities underlying this condition. Aim 2 is to determine the radiographic precursor lesion(s) for emphysema, and identify the molecular phenotypes underlying airway disease and emphysema. Aim 3 is to advance understanding of the biology of COPD exacerbations through analysis of predisposing baseline phenotypes, exacerbation triggers and host inflammatory response.
An Open Label Extension Study to Evaluate Inhaled Treprostinil in Adult PH With ILD Including CPFE...
Pulmonary HypertensionInterstitial Lung Disease1 moreThis is a multicenter, open-label trial to evaluate the safety and efficacy of inhaled treprostinil in subjects with pre-capillary pulmonary hypertension (PH) associated with interstitial lung disease (ILD) including combined pulmonary fibrosis and emphysema (CPFE). The study will include about 266 patients who completed all required assessments in the RIN-PH-201 study at approximately 100 clinical trial centers. The study will continue Your participation in this study is voluntary and will last until you discontinue from the study or the study ends. The study will continue until each subject reaches the Week 108 visit or until inhaled treprostinil become commercially available for patients with PH associated with ILD including CPFE (whichever is sooner).
LVRC IDE Crossover Study (Crossover From IDE Trial CLN0009)
EmphysemaCrossover study for patients who were randomized to the Control Group in CLN0009 (NCT01608490).