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The aim of this proof-of-concept study is to obtain data that will contribute to the development of sensor devices (biosensor and environmental sensor) for patients with lung diseases (e.g. COPD). The study aims to validate our previous results from healthy subjects by joint testing of the biosensor and environmental device in a real-world setting. Healthy subjects and COPD subjects will be exposed to air of a traffic dense urban region ("urban" air) and to filtered indoor air ("clean" air) during activity and rest. Environmental and biomarker sensors will be used to measure several biomarkers and environmental conditions.
Full description
The EU-sponsored REMEDIA project (Impact of exposome on the course of lung diseases, Grant agreement ID 874753) contributes to the understanding of the influence of the exposome on chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and cystic fibrosis (CF). While COPD is considered to be mainly related to the external exposome (smoking, ambient particulate matter, household air pollution, occupational particulate matter, ozone and second-hand smoke) CF is the consequence of a genetic defect in the CFTR gene, which gives an essential role to factors outside of the exposome. However, COPD and CF share common characteristics such as high phenotypic variability of unknown origin, and similar progressive loss of lung function with small bronchi alterations. Given this high phenotypic variability it is clear that the overall picture must be supplemented by considering additional components of the exposome. The REMEDIA project investigates the specific exposome associated with particular COPD or CF phenotypes.
Objective of work package 3 within the REMEDIA project is the development of a mobile environmental sensor toolbox that is capable to assess the external exposome (temperature, humidity, particulate matter (PM), volatile organic compounds (VOC), nitrogen dioxide (NO2), ozone (O3), carbon-monoxide (CO), and sulfur dioxide (SO2)) and a mobile biosensor unit that can measure inflammatory biomarkers in exhaled breath. Currently specific sensors for the analysis of hexanal, nitrotyrosine and neutrophils elastase are included into the sensor tool kit. Other relevant molecules are evaluated and selected in other work packages and could be included into the tool kit.
Our previous experimental exposure study focused on the major environmental air pollutant ozone and was supposed to test the biosensor unit under close to "real life conditions". Ozone is known to cause a temporary neutrophilic airway inflammation, which is also typical for patients with COPD and CF.
This proof-of-concept study aims to validate our previous results from healthy subjects by joint testing of the biosensor and environmental device in a real-world setting. Healthy subjects and COPD subjects will be exposed to air of a traffic dense urban region ("urban" air) and to filtered indoor air ("clean" air) during activity and rest. The biosensor will measure the following biomarker: 3-Nitrotyrosin, Hexanal and Neutrophil Elastase. The environmental sensor will measure the following parameters: CO, O3, SO2, NO2, VOC, PM10, PM2.5, temperature, humidity, light and sound level. The collected data will be evaluated in terms of population and exposure.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Healthy subjects:
Able and willing to give written informed consent.
Healthy male and female subjects aged 40-70 years, inclusive. Women will be considered for inclusion if they are:
Not pregnant, as confirmed by pregnancy test (see assessment schedule), and not breastfeeding.
Of non-childbearing potential (i.e., physiologically incapable of becoming pregnant, including any female who is postmenopausal, with documented proof of hysterectomy or tubal ligation, without an alternative medical cause according to the Clinical Trial Facilitation Group (CTFG) document "Recommendations related to contraception and pregnancy testing in clinical trials").
Of childbearing potential and using a highly effective method of contraception according to the contraception requirements in section 7.2 from two weeks prior to visit 1 until the end of study participation.
Normal lung function with FEV1 predicted ≥ 80% and FEV1/FVC≥70%.
Body mass index of ≥18.6 and ≤30 kg/m2
Non-smoker or former smoker with <10 pack years who had stopped smoking (including e-cigarettes) for at least 12 months before Screening.
COPD subjects:
Able and willing to give written informed consent.
Male and female subjects aged 40-70 years, inclusive. Women will be considered for inclusion if they are:
Not pregnant, as confirmed by pregnancy test (see assessment schedule), and not breastfeeding.
Of non-childbearing potential (i.e., physiologically incapable of becoming pregnant, including any female who is postmenopausal, with documented proof of hysterectomy or tubal ligation, without an alternative medical cause according to the Clinical Trial Facilitation Group (CTFG) document "Recommendations related to contraception and pregnancy testing in clinical trials").
Of childbearing potential and using a highly effective method of contraception according to the contraception requirements in section 7.2 from two weeks prior to visit 1 until the end of study participation.
Clinical diagnosis of COPD stage 1 to 2 (GOLD classification)
FEV1/FVC <70% post-bronchodilator at visit 1
FEV1 ≥50% of the predicted normal value post-bronchodilator at visit 1
FEV1 ≥1.5L pre-bronchodilator
Ex-smokers for at least 12 months with a history of at least 10 pack years.
Body mass index of ≥ 18.6 and ≤30 kg/m2.
Exclusion criteria
Healthy subjects:
COPD subjects:
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
25 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
René Pflock, Dr.; Jens Hohlfeld, Prof. Dr.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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