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Respiratory Microbiota, Infection Characteristics and Imaging Manifestations in Patients With Chronic Airway Inflammation

F

First Affiliated Hospital of Ningbo University

Status

Not yet enrolling

Conditions

Bronchiectasis
Asthma
Chronic Airway Inflammation
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Study type

Observational

Funder types

NETWORK

Identifiers

NCT06938022
2025-108A-01

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study,Respiratory microbiota, infection characteristics and imaging manifestations in patients with chronic airway inflammation, adopted a prospective, observational, multi-omics study design to comprehensively evaluate the effects of respiratory microbiota, infection characteristics and imaging manifestations on disease outcomes and quality of life in patients with chronic airway inflammation. Involving six parallel sub-studies, These include: (1) the differences and mechanisms of lung microecology in ICS treatment sensitivity and resistance in patients with chronic airway inflammation, (2) the study of respiratory viral infection and inflammatory markers in patients with acute exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, (3) the effect of respiratory viral infection on the airway inflammation and disease severity of asthma in acute exacerbation, (4) the clinical significance of fungal infection in acute exacerbation of bronchiectasis, (5) the role of pulmonary function test and chest CT in predicting acute exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and (6) the predictive value of baseline pulmonary function and radiomics in acute exacerbation of bronchiectasis, Each sub-study targeted a different study purpose and a specific patient population. All sub-studies followed uniform research principles, including scientificity, ethics, and consistency. All subjects were required to sign an informed consent form before enrollment to ensure that they understood the purpose, process, possible risks and privacy protection measures of the study. The study plans to enroll about 1,000 eligible patients covering chronic airway inflammatory diseases such as asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and bronchiectasis.

In this study, multi-omics techniques, including microbiome, metabolomics, radiomics, and transcriptomics, were used to comprehensively evaluate the effects of respiratory microbiota, infection characteristics, and imaging manifestations on disease outcomes and quality of life in patients with chronic airway inflammation.

Enrollment

1,000 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 80 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

(1) Age: 18 to 80 years old (inclusive), without restrictions on gender or ethnicity.

(2) Disease Diagnosis:

  1. COPD patients must meet the GOLD diagnostic criteria, with post-bronchodilator FEV1/FVC < 70% and FEV1 < 80% of the predicted value.
  2. Asthma patients must meet clinical diagnostic criteria, including recurrent wheezing, shortness of breath symptoms, frequently occurring at night; during attacks, wheezing sounds can be heard in both lungs; effective treatment with bronchodilators or corticosteroids, or symptoms can be relieved spontaneously, and at least one of the following tests must be positive: positive bronchial provocation test; positive bronchodilator test with FEV1 increase ≥12%, and FEV1 increase absolute value ≥200ml; daily peak expiratory flow (PEF) variability ≥10% within one week.
  3. Bronchiectasis patients must meet the diagnostic criteria based on CT imaging, including: bronchial diameter/accompanying pulmonary artery diameter ratio >1; high-resolution CT (HRCT) showing dilated cystic, columnar, or cystic bronchial shadows.

(3) Disease Status:

  1. Patients with chronic airway inflammation must be in a stable phase, defined as no acute exacerbations, hospitalizations, or use of other treatments for at least 4 weeks.
  2. COPD patients with acute exacerbations must meet the definition of acute exacerbation: at least two major symptoms (dyspnea, increased sputum, and purulent sputum) worsen, or at least one major symptom and one minor symptom (wheezing, sore throat, cough without other causes, and fever) worsen.
  3. Asthma patients in the acute attack phase must meet the definition of acute attack: sudden worsening of symptoms (including wheezing, shortness of breath, chest tightness, cough, etc.), decreased lung function, poor response to routine treatment, other clinically diagnosed acute attacks.
  4. Bronchiectasis patients with acute exacerbations must meet the definition of acute exacerbation: increased cough, increased sputum or sputum viscosity, purulent sputum, dyspnea or decreased exercise tolerance, fatigue or discomfort, hemoptysis, at least three of the above six symptoms occur newly or significantly worsen, lasting ≥48 hours.

(4) Treatment Status:

  1. In the chronic airway inflammation patient ICS treatment study, patients must require ICS treatment under routine care, i.e., have been recommended to use ICS and are currently using ICS treatment.
  2. In other studies, patients must maintain unchanged long-term medication during the follow-up period, but may be appropriately adjusted according to the attending physician's clinical decision.

(5) Others:

  1. All participants must voluntarily participate in the study and sign the informed consent form.
  2. Patients must be able to communicate in language or writing, understand and sign the content of the informed consent form, and be able to complete the required pulmonary function and other auxiliary examinations for the trial.

Exclusion criteria

(1) Recent Medication Use:

  1. In the chronic airway inflammation patient ICS study, exclude patients who have used corticosteroid-related treatment within the last 3 months, exclude patients who have received antibiotic treatment within the last 3 months.
  2. In other studies, exclude patients who have used antibiotics, immunosuppressants, cytotoxic agents, or hormones systemically within the last 4 weeks.

(2) Other Significant Diseases:

  1. Clinically significant pulmonary diseases other than the study disease, such as active tuberculosis, pulmonary embolism, pneumothorax, pneumothorax, pulmonary hypertension, interstitial lung disease, lung cancer, pulmonary fibrosis, tuberculosis, etc.
  2. Severe other systemic diseases, such as myocardial infarction, severe arrhythmia, liver dysfunction, renal insufficiency, rheumatic immune system diseases, hematological diseases, active malignant tumors, etc.

(3) Disease Status:

[1] Patients who have experienced any degree of acute exacerbation within the last 4 weeks before screening for the stable phase study.

(4) Special Populations:

  1. Female patients who are pregnant or breastfeeding.
  2. Patients with poor compliance.
  3. Patients who cannot complete sample collection due to physical or psychological factors, especially those who need to collect multiple samples.
  4. Patients who are participating in other clinical trials. (5) Related Contraindications:

[1] Patients with contraindications to pulmonary function tests and chest CT, such as chest metal, history of myocardial infarction, stroke, aortic aneurysm, or ocular surgery or retinal detachment within the last 3 months.

Trial design

1,000 participants in 6 patient groups

ICS treatment sensitivity and resistance in Chronic Airway Inflammation
Description:
Using a prospective, single-center, observational study design, 240 patients were planned to be enrolled, divided into ICS-sensitive and resistant. Through multi-omics technologies such as 16S rRNA gene sequencing, metagenomic sequencing, and metabolomics analysis, the composition, structure and functional gene differences of airway and intestinal microbiota were analyzed, and the microbiota-metabolite-host network was constructed by combining inflammatory factor detection and transcriptomic analysis, and the complex mechanism of ICS treatment response was analyzed.
The study of respiratory viral infection and inflammatory markers in patients with acute exacerbatio
Description:
A prospective, open-label, self-controlled trial design was adopted, and 150 patients were expected to be included. RT-PCR was used to detect respiratory viruses, and ELISA was used to detect inflammatory markers, and the dynamic changes of viral infection and inflammatory markers and their association with clinical phenotypes were analyzed.
The effect of respiratory viral infection on the airway inflammation and disease severity of asthma
Description:
Patients aged 18-80 years with a clinical diagnosis of asthma exacerbation were included, nasopharyngeal swabs and sputum samples were collected for viral analysis, and ELISA was used to detect airway inflammation markers, and the number and severity of acute exacerbations, hospitalization and questionnaire scores were evaluated.
The clinical significance of fungal infection in acute exacerbation of bronchiectasis
Description:
A prospective, observational study design was used and 150 patients were expected to be included. The diversity and abundance of fungi in sputum were detected by 18S rRNA technology, and the inflammatory markers were detected by ELISA, and the relationship between fungal infection and clinical manifestations, questionnaire scores and inflammatory markers was analyzed.
The role of pulmonary function test and chest CT in predicting acute exacerbation of chronic obstruc
Description:
A prospective, observational cohort study design was adopted, and 200 patients were expected to be included. Pulmonary function tests, bronchodilator tests, chest CT scans, etc., were followed up for 1 year, and the changes in symptoms, acute exacerbations and all-cause mortality were recorded, and the biomarkers predicting acute exacerbations were analyzed using statistical models.
The predictive value of baseline pulmonary function and radiomics in acute exacerbation of bronchiec
Description:
A prospective, observational clinical trial design is adopted, and 150 patients are expected to be included. The clinical data, pulmonary function indexes and thin-slice CT scan results of the patients were collected, and the follow-up was 1 year, and the number of acute exacerbations, hospitalization and quality of life scores were recorded for statistical analysis.

Trial contacts and locations

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Central trial contact

Chao Cao; Shiyi He

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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