Acute Effect of Mometasone on Beta-adrenergic Airway and Airway Vascular Relaxation in Severe Asthma
NCT ID: NCT01210170
Last Updated: 2017-11-21
Study Results
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View full resultsBasic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
22 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2010-10-31
2013-02-28
Brief Summary
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In the present proposal, the investigators wish to use different single doses of mometasone, a clinically effective ICS, administered with or at different times before albuterol inhalation in subjects with moderate persistent asthma who are obstructed at the time of study.
With this approach the investigators will test the hypothesis that a single inhalation of mometasone causes an acute, transient, dose-dependent potentiation of beta2-adrenergic bronchodilation.
If the hypothesis that a single dose of mometasone acutely potentiates beta2-adrenergic bronchodilation is correct, the results would have a significant impact on treatment strategies involving ICSs and beta2-adrenergic agonists in patients with asthma.
Detailed Description
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Approval for the protocol will be requested from the University of Miami Institutional Review Board. All subjects will provide written informed consent.
Exclusion criteria:
* Cardiovascular disease and use of cardiovascular medications
* Pregnancy
* Use of oral controller medication for asthma (methylxanthines, systemic glucocorticosteroids, leukotriene modifiers)
* An acute respiratory infection within 4 weeks before enrollment.
Each subject will make 8 visits to the research laboratory.
Procedures:
Visit 1 (screening visit): On this visit, after having signed the consent form, the subjects will perform spirometry before and 15 min after inhaling 180 µg albuterol from a HFA-MDI using a spacer.
Visit 2-8:Subjects that qualify for the study will be asked to return for 7 more visits for the following treatment protocols:
* Inhalation of 400 µg mometasone 30 min before inhalation of 180 µg albuterol
* Inhalation of mometasone placebo 30 min before inhalation of 180 µg albuterol
* Simultaneous inhalation of 400 µg mometasone and 180 µg albuterol
* Simultaneous inhalation of mometasone placebo and 180 µg albuterol
Systemic blood pressure, pulse, O2 saturation, spirometry and airway blood flow ( Qaw) will be measured before mometasone or placebo inhalation, and before and 15 min after albuterol inhalation except on the day when mometasone and albuterol are co-administered; on that day the measurements will be made before and 15 min after the mometasone/albuterol co-administration.
Conditions
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Keywords
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
SINGLE_GROUP
OTHER
DOUBLE
Study Groups
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mometasone 400 mcg - 30 min
randomly assigned intervention
mometasone 400 mcg
mometasone inhalation before albuterol.
mometasone 400 mcg simultaneous
randomly assigned intervention
mometasone 400 mcg
mometasone inhalation before albuterol.
placebo- 30 min
randomly assigned intervention
placebo
placebo inhalation before albuterol.
placebo simultaneous
randomly assigned intervention
placebo
placebo inhalation before albuterol.
mometasone 400 mcg - 60 min
randomly assigned intervention
mometasone 400 mcg
mometasone inhalation before albuterol.
placebo- 60 min
randomly assigned intervention
placebo
placebo inhalation before albuterol.
mometasone 200 mcg - 30 min
randomly assigned intervention
mometasone 200 mcg
200ug mometasone before albuterol.
mometasone 200 mcg - 60 min
randomly assigned intervention
mometasone 200 mcg
200ug mometasone before albuterol.
mometasone 200 mcg simultaneous
randomly assigned intervention
mometasone 200 mcg
200ug mometasone before albuterol.
Interventions
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placebo
placebo inhalation before albuterol.
mometasone 400 mcg
mometasone inhalation before albuterol.
mometasone 200 mcg
200ug mometasone before albuterol.
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Exclusion Criteria
18 Years
65 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Merck Sharp & Dohme LLC
INDUSTRY
University of Miami
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Adam Wanner
Professor of Medicine
Principal Investigators
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Adam Wanner
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
University of Miami
Locations
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Human Research Laboratory- University of Miami School of Medicine
Miami, Florida, United States
Countries
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References
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Mendes ES, Cadet L, Arana J, Wanner A. Acute effect of an inhaled glucocorticosteroid on albuterol-induced bronchodilation in patients with moderately severe asthma. Chest. 2015 Apr;147(4):1037-1042. doi: 10.1378/chest.14-1742.
Other Identifiers
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P05299
Identifier Type: OTHER
Identifier Source: secondary_id
20071188
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id