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Sphingosine-1-phosphate in Asthma

G

Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Asthma

Treatments

Other: Bronchial challenge test

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study is being undertaken in order to enhance our understanding how human airways are being constricted in healthy people and in individuals with asthma. There is an unmet need for identification of new pathways (mediators) related to enhanced constriction of the asthmatic airways that would reveal new targets for therapy. Sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) is a naturally occurring bioactive lipid molecule that has been suggested to play an important role in asthma. Physiologically, S1P can be detected in human blood but local tissue concentrations (for example in the lung) are very low. Upon activation many cells can secrete S1P. Increased concentrations of S1P have been detected in airways of asthmatic subjects after allergen inhalation. When studied in animal models, S1P did not cause contraction of airways in healthy animals but contracted airways in animal with pulmonary inflammation. In laboratory experiments S1P has been shown to be a potent constrictor of cells responsible for contraction of human airways. As yet, however, we lack evidence that S1P actually causes constriction of airways in real life. Establishing S1P as a molecule capable of causing airway constriction in humans and perhaps specifically in asthmatics will have important implications for our understanding of physiological and pathophysiological responses in human airways and could open new windows for therapeutic strategies in diseases like asthma.

Enrollment

12 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 65 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Cases (asthmatics) inclusion criteria

  1. Physician diagnosed asthma, defined as a clear history of typical symptoms and clear reversibility of the PEF/FEV1 (12% or more) within the past year and/or methacholine PC20 < 8mg/ml.

Cases Exclusion criteria

  1. Pregnancy or lactation
  2. Moderate / Severe asthma (FEV1/PEF < 80%of the predicted value at screening)
  3. Patients with any chronic illness other than asthma and other recognised atopic diseases (eczema, rhinitis) or any other abnormality which in the opinion of the principal investigator might compromise the study findings
  4. A history of recent (within the past 4 weeks) upper or lower respiratory tract infection
  5. Patients receiving oral, inhaled or parenteral glucocorticoid therapy (steroid) within the last 4 weeks, long acting relievers (salmeterol, formoterol) and antileukotrienes (montelukast) within last 72 hours.
  6. Inadequate contraception in women of childbearing age
  7. Inability to comprehend or comply with the protocol

Controls inclusion criteria

  1. Lifelong absence of asthma symptoms and lung function within the normal range.

Controls exclusion criteria

  1. Pregnancy or lactation
  2. Patients with any chronic illness or any other abnormality which in the opinion of the principal investigator might compromise the study findings
  3. A history of recent (within the past 4 weeks) upper or lower respiratory tract infection
  4. Oral, inhaled or parenteral glucocorticoid therapy (steroid) within the last 4 weeks, long acting relievers (salmeterol, formoterol) and antileukotrienes (montelukast) within last 72 hours
  5. Inadequate contraception in women of childbearing age
  6. Inability to comprehend or comply with the protocol

Trial design

Primary purpose

Basic Science

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Leonard Siew, MRCP, PhD; Grzegorz Woszczek, MD, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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