Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
The goal of this study is to determine if viral infection with the common cold leads to an exacerbation in participants with bronchiectasis. We will compare the participants with bronchiectasis to a group of healthy participants. The main questions it aims to answer are:
Participants will attend for a screening visit to see if they are eligible. All participants who are eligible and have consented to take part will have baseline investigations done including blood tests and a bronchoscopy. They will be given a spray of a virus that causes the common cold into their nose. They will then be followed up over the next 6 weeks with some of the following procedures at each study visit; spirometry, nasosorption, nasal lavage, nasal brushing, blood test, sputum collection and a bronchoscopy. Participants will be asked to keep a daily record of their symptoms throughout the study.
Full description
Study Rationale:
Bronchiectasis is a chronic respiratory disease affective >200,000 individuals in the UK. We are aiming to develop an experimental rhinovirus challenge model for bronchiectasis. This model could provide crucial insights into how viral infections trigger exacerbations (flare-ups) in bronchiectasis patients. Recent studies have found that viruses, especially rhinoviruses, are present in a significant number of bronchiectasis exacerbations. However, their exact role and the mechanisms behind increased viral susceptibility in these patients remain unclear. This model will allow us to study how factors like altered lung microbiota, might influence viral susceptibility. By enabling controlled sampling of both upper and lower airways at specific times during an infection, this study offers a opportunity to understand the complex immunological responses involved. Currently we have a poor understanding of exacerbation mechanisms in bronchiectasis and future development of treatment strategies require a suitable translational system for testing. This research could shed light on why bronchiectasis patients are more vulnerable to viral infections and potentially pave the way for new strategies to predict, prevent, or manage exacerbations.
End of Study:
• Follow-up period of 42 days.
Study Centres:
• There will be 1 study centre, ICRRU within Imperial College Healthcare NHS site at St Mary's Hospital London, United Kingdom.
Study Intervention:
• All participants will be inoculated intra-nasally with rhinovirus A-16.
Study Procedures:
Study Sample Size:
• 18 participants will be recruited with bronchiectasis, 18 patients with bronchiectasis and chronic pseudomonas colonisation and 18 healthy participants will be recruited.
Statistical Methods:
• Using an independent two-sided t-test a sample size of 15 participants per group will allow the detection of a significant difference in lower respiratory tract symptom scores and secondary endpoints.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
For healthy volunteers:
For bronchiectasis study subjects:
Exclusion criteria
For healthy volunteers and bronchiectasis study subjects:
For bronchiectasis study subjects:
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
54 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Central trial contact
Aran Singanayagam, PhD; Charlotte E Carter, MBChB
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal