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Non Invasive Evaluation of Bronchial Inflammation in Infants : a Study of the Sputum Cellularity After Hypertonic Saline Induction

Non Invasive Evaluation of Bronchial Inflammation in Infants : a Study of the Sputum Cellularity After Hypertonic Saline Induction

Status
Terminated
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT02245074
Acronym
CYTOASTHME
Enrollment
34
Registered
2014-09-19
Start date
2010-06-30
Completion date
2012-08-31
Last updated
2014-09-19

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Infantile Asthma

Keywords

Infantile asthma, Induced sputum, Phenotypes, Eosinophils, Neutrophils

Brief summary

* Background: Infantile asthma is composed of various phenotypes, however the definition is still based on the clinics. Namely, the infants could be classified as transitory, peristent or late and persistent asthma. Some risk factors for the persistent asthma phenotype are recognized as atopy. However all peristent asthma are not related to atopy. Regarding the pathophysiology, little is known on airways inflammation in these infants, and the current data are mostly based on the BAL analyses, or on biopsies. Consequently, BLA and biopsies should be justified by the need of an indicated fiberbronchoscopy, and therefore limited to severe infantile asthma. Airway secretion could be also collected after hypertonic saline induction and chest physiotherapy. This method has been validated in the children, but has not in the younger. * Aim : Analyses of cell profiles regarding the severity of infantile asthma. * Methods : This descriptive study compared 3 groups of infants, the first with acute exacerbation, the second with uncontrolled asthma and the third with controlled asthma. Accounting 25% of failure, the number of 40 infants per groups has been calculated. The sputum induction will be performed by repeated nebulizations of 3% saline hypertonic solution. Cellularity and cell profiles were analysed as previously recommended. Safety will be evaluated. * Inclusion criteria : Any infants suffering of infantile asthma (at least 3 episodes of wheezing during the 2 first years of life), aged between 6-12months.Asthma control was evaluated on the last 4 weeks, allowing to classify the infants . Control asthma was aimed when neither exacerbation nor persistent symptoms were observed. Uncontrolled asthma was defined whether the infant presented any symptoms during the last 4 weeks. Exacerbation was defined as any acute symptoms, as cough, dyspnoea or wheezing. * Feasibility : A preliminary study has been presented in the Vienna ERS congress.

Interventions

The sputum induction will be performed by repeated nebulizations of 3% saline hypertonic solution. Cellularity and cell profiles were analysed as previously recommended.

Sponsors

University Hospital, Rouen
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
SINGLE_GROUP
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
6 Months to 3 Years
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Age between 6 and 36 mo. * Ambulatory or hospitalized. * With %SaO2 ³ 95% * Parents information and non-opposition from the parents

Exclusion criteria

* Any underlying chronic disease * Been given oral corticosteroid during the last four weeks * Known adverse events with nebulized saline solution * With cold during the 4 last weeks for the controled group. * With %SaO2 \< 95%

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frame
Cell profiles Analysis regarding the severity of asthma as defined above.Day 1

Countries

France

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026