Exploring How Viral Infections Affect People With Chronic Lung Disease
NCT ID: NCT06625944
Last Updated: 2025-07-14
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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RECRUITING
180 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2024-11-01
2027-04-30
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Specifically, this unique study design will allow us to study the following important areas in unprecedented detail and depth: (i) Early identification and diagnosis of clinical deterioration / exacerbations to comprehensively understand the role played by viruses in chronic lung disease exacerbations. (ii) Full capture of all clinical deterioration / exacerbation events experienced by patients with chronic lung disease including mild, typically unreported episodes. (iii) Evaluation of the immune and microbiological dynamics associated with recovery from exacerbation episodes and the impact upon longer term disease progression.
Clinical Visits and Sampling:
(i) Baseline study visit: All eligible individuals will undergo screening when clinically stable including clinical history/ examination, respiratory function testing (spirometry) and a severity assessment with the use of validated questionnaires (COPD assessment test (CAT), Bronchiectasis Health Questionnaire (BHQ)). Clinical information including microbiology cultures, the underlying lung disease and other medical conditions and medication history will be obtained from medical records.
Prior imaging including CT images will be pseudoanonymised and stored for radiological scoring and analysis. At the first study visit the following biological samples will be taken to address the study objectives:
* sputum
* nasal samples (Nasopharyngeal swab, synthetic absorptive matrix (SAM) sampling to sample nasal lining fluid and nasal brushings)
* Exhaled breath
* Venous (40mls) and capillary blood (\~0.5mls)
* Stool (remote stool sampling (performed at home and posted in) using secure bespoke collection kits)
(ii) Exacerbation monitoring and sampling: All participants will record daily diary cards which will be monitored by the study team. This will enable full characterisation of all exacerbations including those that would typically be unreported in routine clinical circumstances. Participants that develop symptoms of acute viral infection or acute exacerbation will have the following sampling and clinical assessment as detailed above.
* Early exacerbation sampling (\<48hrs of increased symptoms) (REMOTE STUDY VISIT from home)
* Remote nasopharyngeal swab and sputum sampling with bespoke collection kits
* Remote capillary blood sampling with bespoke collection kits
* Mid-exacerbation sampling (within 5 days of increased symptoms) (IN PERSON VISIT)
* clinical assessment, spirometry, validated questionnaires (as per baseline)
* sputum
* nasal samples (Nasopharyngeal swab, SAM and nasal brushings)
* Exhaled breath
* Venous (40mls) and capillary blood (\~0.5mls)
* Stool (remote stool sampling using bespoke collection kits)
* Exacerbation recovery sampling (4 weeks after initial increased symptoms) (REMOTE STUDY VISIT from home)
* Remote nasopharyngeal swab, SAM and sputum sampling with bespoke collection kits
* Remote capillary blood sampling with bespoke collection kits (iii) Stable longitudinal assessment: All participants will undergo further clinical visits similar to baseline at 12 monthly intervals over a 2 year period (as detailed above)
Conditions
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Study Design
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COHORT
PROSPECTIVE
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
AND
\- Prior history of exacerbation within last year (defined as requiring antibiotic and/or corticosteroids).
Exclusion Criteria
* Exacerbation within 4 weeks of study recruitment and/or clinical instability at the time of recruitment.
* Pregnancy.
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Imperial College London
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Anand Shah
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Imperial College London
Locations
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Royal Brompton Hospital
London, , United Kingdom
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Facility Contacts
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Other Identifiers
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336487
Identifier Type: OTHER
Identifier Source: secondary_id
172663
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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