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About
The goal of this study is to examine exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) caused by a common cold virus called rhinovirus, to identify new treatments. Exacerbations are flare-ups of respiratory symptoms which are a major cause of ill health in people with COPD, and are most commonly caused by viruses.
The main questions the study aims to answer are:
The study will compare eligible participants with COPD to healthy volunteers, and will involve intentionally infecting each participant with rhinovirus in a controlled environment. They will undergo baseline investigations prior to infection including a first bronchoscopy. Post-infection each participant will undergo a range of tests, including a second bronchoscopy, to compare how processes in the body, and especially the lungs, differ between people who do and do not have COPD.
Full description
Study Rationale:
The investigators aim to understand the biological mechanisms that underlie exacerbations of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) to drive the discovery of new treatments.
COPD is the 4th leading cause of death worldwide, causing 3.5 million deaths in 2021. Acute exacerbations of COPD (AECOPD) involve sudden flare-ups of symptoms, commonly triggered by viral infections, and are the major cause of COPD morbidity, mortality and healthcare costs. Developing new treatments for AECOPD requires a better understanding of the processes occurring in the lungs, before and during exacerbations. Naturally-occurring AECOPD are challenging to study in a way that allows reliable measurement of disease mechanisms, and repeated lung sampling can be impractical and potentially dangerous.
The investigators have therefore developed a human rhinovirus challenge experimental model of AECOPD. This involves infecting participants with a common cold virus called rhinovirus (RV). These studies have demonstrated that RV causes mild-to-moderate exacerbations in 95% of COPD subjects, that confounding factors can be controlled to take reliable measurements, and that repeated sampling of the lungs and respiratory tract can safely and easily be performed in a controlled research environment.
The investigators will compare people who have COPD with people who do not have COPD, including smokers and non-smokers, to identify the processes important in COPD. Researchers will measure a range of clinical and scientific outcomes, using cutting-edge 'multiomics' techniques to understand mechanisms in RV-induced AECOPD to an extent that has not been achieved before.
The crucial information that this study generates will be used to identify new treatments to reduce the frequency and severity of AECOPD. Data will be made publicly available for others to use and analyse, and will be integrated with other databases to maximise the scientific benefit that is gained from our participants' contribution to the project.
End of Study:
Follow up period of 42 days
Study Centres:
There will be 1 study centre: Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust
Study Intervention:
All participants will be inoculated intra-nasally with rhinovirus-A16
Study Sample Size:
25 participants with mild/moderate COPD, 13 smoking controls, 12 non-smoking controls.
Study procedures
Enrollment
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Inclusion Criteria for COPD subjects
Male or female sex
Age ≥40 years and ≤75 years at the time of signing the consent form
Medical history or clinical diagnosis of COPD
Significant smoking history, defined as:
COPD spirometry criteria:
History of acute exacerbations of COPD as defined by the participant answering "yes" to the question: "do your COPD symptoms get noticeably worse when you catch a cold?"
Clinically stable with no COPD exacerbations within 8 weeks prior to enrolment
Permitted to take short and long-acting bronchodilators including beta agonists and muscarinic antagonist inhalers
Co-morbidity criteria:
Permitted to have a positive skin test for atopy
Inclusion Criteria for non-smoking controls
Male or female sex
Age ≥ 40 years and ≤ 75 years at the time of signing the consent form
No history or clinical diagnosis of COPD
No significant smoking history, defined as:
Controls spirometry criteria
Co-morbidity criteria:
Permitted to have a positive skin test for atopy.
Inclusion Criteria for smoking controls
• Identical to non-smoking controls, with the exception of smoking history:
Exclusion Criteria:
Participants with other causes of chronic airflow limitation, including but not limited to:
Presence of any significant systemic disease, that in the opinion of the investigator would (a) make participation in the study unduly risky, or (b) significantly interfere with important outcomes being measured.
Pregnant, planning to become pregnant, testing positive for pregnancy at the screening visit test, or nursing females during and within 30 days of treatment.
Treatment with oral, inhaled or nasal corticosteroids within 8 weeks prior to enrolment.
Treatment with antibiotics in the 8 weeks preceding enrolment.
Treatment with nasal medications, anti-leukotrienes, anti-histamine at the time of the study.
Presence (at screening) of serum rhinovirus-A16 neutralising antibodies in a titre >1:2.
Individuals with close contact to at risk patient group, including:
Participation in other clinical research studies that, in the opinion of the investigator, would (a) make participation in the study unduly risky, or (b) significantly interfere with important outcomes being measured in this or other studies, or (c) present an unacceptable visit burden to the participant.
50 participants in 3 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Carmen Chan; Dominic P Wilkins, MBBS
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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