Status
Conditions
Study type
Funder types
Identifiers
About
The mission of the SARP is to improve the understanding of severe asthma through integrated study of its clinical and biological features and to evaluate their changes over time. The ultimate goal of these efforts is to promote better treatments for severe asthma.
Full description
The mission of the SARP is to improve the understanding of severe asthma to develop better treatments. The SARP will gain a better understanding of asthma and its endotypes, in children and adults, by defining the disease at the molecular and cellular levels in the context of the temporal phenotypic expression of the disease. To this end, the SARP investigators will utilize both mechanistic and evoked phenotype approaches to: 1) characterize developmental molecular, cellular and physiologic phenotypes in children and adults with mild to severe asthma, and 2) to further elucidate the evolving pathobiology and pathogenesis of severe asthma and its sub-phenotypes and 3) compare these features over time. This approach involves a shared longitudinal protocol conducted across all participating centers which includes common information on all SARP participants. Additionally, the SARP investigators have each identified mechanistic research questions to be included in the shared longitudinal protocol. Together, these longitudinal and mechanistic approaches will enable prediction of phenotype stability/fluctuation and pharmacologic responses and identification of novel, disease-modifying targets for treatment.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Asthmatic Patients:
Inclusion Criteria:
Physician diagnosis of asthma,
Age 6 years and older
Evidence of historical reversibility, including either:
Exclusion Criteria:
Healthy Controls:
Inclusion criteria: Healthy subjects between the age of 18 and 65 years. Exclusion criteria
1,100 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Central trial contact
David Mauger, PhD; Kendall Baab
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal