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Asthma Severity in Women: The Influence of Training and Menopause (ATOM)

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Rigshospitalet

Status

Terminated

Conditions

Late-Onset Asthma

Treatments

Behavioral: Aerobic exercise

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

Introduction: Late-onset asthma in women is characterized by poor disease control and reduced quality of life despite intensive treatment with inhaled steroid and beta2-agonist. The condition is further worsened at menopause due to the loss of estrogen leading to increased asthma exacerbation frequency, increased airway inflammation and decreased lung function. Exercise training may increase disease control of asthma patients, but to what extent the same effect is seen in postmenopausal women with late-onset asthma is unknown. These asthma patients represent a phenotype that is characterized by low eosinophilic airway inflammation, severe symptoms, moderate obesity and poor response to conventional medicine. Thus, our hypothesis is that regular physical exercise is especially associated with an improvement in asthma control in this phenotype. The aim of this project is to test this hypothesis and to assess whether an improvement is associated with reduced local and systemic inflammation, change in heart function, lung function and/or body composition.

Study design: 40 postmenopausal women with late-onset asthma are recruited via the outpatient clinic at the Respiratory Department at Bispebjerg Hospital and through advertisement. The participants are randomized 1:1 into two groups. One group performs supervised exercise training (spinning) three times per week for 12 weeks while the other group is a control group. Before and after the intervention asthma control, local and systemic inflammation, heart function and body composition is measured.

Results: Analysis will be performed to detect changes within and between the groups before and after intervention. Primary outcome is change in ACQ (Asthma Control Questionnaire). Local and systemic inflammation is measured by changes in bronchial challenge to methacholine, sputum cell count and blood tests. Furthermore, secondary outcomes include change in heart function measured by stress-echocardiography and change in body composition measured by Dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DEXA).

Conclusion: There are to date no prospective studies that can support recommendations containing asthma rehabilitation with supervised regular physical activity for postmenopausal women. Thus, this study will provide novel understanding of the importance of physical activity in a chronic disease such as asthma.

Full description

Overall study design

The study is a single-blinded randomized controlled intervention study. Forty postmenopausal women with late-onset asthma (>16 years at debut) are recruited from the asthma outpatient-clinic at Bispebjerg Hospital or other hospital/practitioner in the region and/or by advertisement. The participants are block-randomized into two groups of 20, where one group is control and the other undergoes a period of regular exercise training. The investigators will be blinded and will not know whether the subjects have trained or not.

Detailed study design

Participants allocated to the exercise training group undergo a training intervention consisting of 45 minutes of intermittent high intensity aerobic spinning training three times per week for 12 weeks. Participants allocated to the control group will continue usual care without training. No changes to current treatment will be made by the investigators on any of the groups.

The training will consist of short periods of high intensity intervals where subjects reach above 80% of maximal oxygen consumption. Spinning sessions will be fully supervised by trained instructors with a bachelor of sports and science or bachelor of medicine and conducted in the Department of Nutrition, Exercise and Sports, University of Copenhagen. Subjects will wear heart rate monitors to ensure adherence to the training protocol. Within two weeks, before and after the intervention, participants from both groups undergo 3 days of testing.

To ensure equal compliance with asthma medication both groups will receive daily electronic reminders. Once a week, all participants will be asked about their compliance to their medication.

Enrollment

12 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

45 to 75 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Late onset asthma (Debut ≥ 16 years of age)
  • ACQ ≥ 1.25
  • Daily treatment for asthma (GINA 2 and above)
  • Age 45 - 75
  • Postmenopausal defined as no menstruation for 6 months, Serum Follicle stimulating hormone >20 International Units per Liter and P-Estradiol nmol/L <0.09
  • BMI 25 - 35
  • Positive bronchial challenge to methacholine, mannitol or positive reversibility to beta2-agonist now or historically
  • Untrained (no participation in vigorous exercise for more than 1 hour per week during the last 2 months)
  • Capable of exercising on a bike

Exclusion criteria

  • Unable to speak and understand Danish or English.
  • Current or former smokers (>6 months cessation) with >20 years of daily smoking with 20 cigarettes per day.
  • Other respiratory disease of clinical significance
  • Cardiovascular: Unstable ischemic heart disease, myocardial infarction within the last 12 months, symptomatic heart failure (EF <40%), symptomatic heart arrhythmia (documented with ECG), uncontrolled hypertension (>155/100)
  • Any disorder that is not stable and in the opinion of the investigator could affect the safety of the subject throughout the study
  • Subjects, who by investigators determination, will not be able to adhere to study protocol

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

12 participants in 2 patient groups

Aerobic exercise intervention
Experimental group
Description:
Aerobic exercise by high intensity interval training, 3 times per week for 12 weeks
Treatment:
Behavioral: Aerobic exercise
Control group
No Intervention group
Description:
No intervention for 12 weeks

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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