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The investigator wish therefore to continue these studies on theophylline principally by conducting a small clinical pilot study on 20-30 COPD patients in a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-group study.
Full description
The global burden of COPD - a common and debilitating chronic inflammatory disease that is characterised by the progressive development of airflow limitation (shortness of breath - SOB) and is poorly reversible with currently available drugs -is increasing. Cigarette smoking is strongly linked with the ongoing inflammation; inflammation that can continue even when the patient has stopped smoking. The severity of airflow limitation (SOB) is correlated with the degree of pulmonary (lung) inflammation.
Histone deacetylases (HDACs)are important molecules in suppressing this pulmonary inflammation. We have recently shown that patients with COPD have a reduction in total HDAC which correlates with the severity of their lung disease.
Corticosteroids (anti-inflammatory treatment) act, at least in part, by recruitment of these HDACs to the site of active inflammatory gene transcription (which reduces the production of inflammatory molecules) and are widely used in COPD in patients with severe disease. Unfortunately, in COPD, inhaled corticosteroids seem to have little effect on the underlying inflammation (though in a selective group of patients with COPD they do reduce the number of infections a patient may have by a small amount).
Theophylline has been used in the treatment of asthma and COPD for over 70 years, but its use has recently declined. Data so far obtained in primary cells (cells from patients used in the laboratory) from COPD patients suggests that low dose theophylline (~5mg/l) should be effective in restoring steroid sensitivity in patients with COPD (and hence reduce inflammation thus improving SOB).
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Inclusion Criteria:Participants with COPD with an FEV1 of 80-30% predicted. This will incorporate the majority of participants with COPD seen within the chest clinic. Patients with an FEV1 > 80% predicted are not generally severe enough to warrant hospital follow up. These patients are also unlikely to have severe enough disease (and therefore airway inflammation) which may be modified by the therapeutic agents we are studying.
Patients with an FEV1 < 30% tend to have more severe symptom limitation and generally (though not always) find participation in a clinical trial involving 4 visits to the clinic difficult. Their airway disease is also generally less responsive to therapeutic intervention and as a consequence finding measurements which show changes to these therapeutic interventions is more difficult.
COPD patients
Exclusion Criteria:
Any history or evidence of asthma
Primary purpose
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Interventional model
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49 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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