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Effect of a LAMA and a uLABA on the Methacholine Dose-response Curve

The Effect of Glycopyrronium and Indacaterol, as Monotherapy and in Combination, on the Methacholine Dose-response Curve

Status
Completed
Phases
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT02953041
Enrollment
31
Registered
2016-11-02
Start date
2016-10-31
Completion date
2017-01-09
Last updated
2017-06-14

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

Conditions

Asthma

Brief summary

The study will assess the effects of two drugs, glycopyrronium and indacaterol, taken either as monotherapy or in combination, on the methacholine dose-response curve. This will allow for further elucidation of the mechanisms of each drug in human participants.

Detailed description

This will be a randomized, double-blind, three-way crossover study testing glycopyrronium (Seebri®) vs. indacaterol (Onbrez®) vs. glycopyrronium+indacaterol. The MCT method used will be the two-minute tidal breathing dosing protocol. The investigators plan to enroll thirty participants, fifteen asthmatics and fifteen non-asthmatics participants. * Asthmatic Participants Procedure: Each participant will undergo a total of twelve MCh challenges. Each MCh challenge will be stopped when the response to MCh reaches a plateau, when the participant's FEV1 drops 40% from baseline, when the highest concentration of MCh (128mg/mL) has been administered, or if the participant wishes to stop (e.g. due to discomfort). For the purpose of this study, a plateau will be defined as the last 3 consecutive data points falling within 5%. The first day of testing will take approx. 3hrs. and will entail participants undergoing a MCh challenge to determine their baseline MCh PC20. They will then self-administer the contents of two Breezhaler inhalers. If taking one of the monotherapies, one inhaler will contain active treatment (50mcg glycopyrronium or 5mcg indacaterol) and the other inhaler will contain a placebo. For the combination treatment arm, both inhalers will contain active drug (one 50mcg glycopyrronium and one 75mcg indacaterol). The identity of the treatment administered will be unknown to the participants and to the study staff. Participants will then undergo MCT post-treatment at 1 hr., 24 hrs., and 48 hrs. Testing at 24 and 48 hrs. will take approximately 1-1.5 hrs. Therefore, participants must attend the lab at roughly the same time of day for three consecutive days for each treatment arm. Following a minimum 10-day washout between treatment administrations, the same procedure will be repeated with the second study treatment. Following a second 10-day washout, the procedure will be repeated with the third study treatment. * Non-Asthmatic Participants Procedure: Each non-asthmatic participant will undergo a single MCh challenge, which should take approx. 1-1.5 hrs. This will allow for the generation of a normal MCh DRC curve to compare with the asthmatic data. The MCh challenge will be stopped when the response to MCh reaches a plateau, when the participant's FEV1 drops 40% from baseline, when the highest concentration of MCh (128mg/mL) has been administered, or if the participant wishes to stop.

Interventions

long-acting muscarinic antagonist

DRUGIndacaterol

ultra long-acting beta agonist

Sponsors

University of Saskatchewan
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
CROSSOVER
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
TRIPLE (Subject, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

* men and women aged 18 or older * stable mild-to-moderate asthma * baseline methacholine PC20 less than or equal to 8mg/mL and FEV1 greater than or equal to 65% of predicted (asthmatic participants) * baseline methacholine PC20 greater than 16mg/mL (healthy participants)

Exclusion criteria

* use of long-acting bronchodilators or long-acting muscarinic antagonists within 30 days of Visit 1 * pregnant or lactating * cardiovascular, prostate, kidney or urinary retention problems * respiratory illness within 4 weeks of Visit 1 * allergen-induced asthma exacerbating within 4 weeks of Visit 1 * hypokalemia * diabetes * glaucoma * smokers and exsmokers with greater than 10 pack years

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Change from baseline methacholine bronchoprotection at 1 hourbaseline versus 1 hour post-treatmentassessed by dose shift of geometric mean methacholine PC20 data

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Change from baseline methacholine bronchoprotection at 24 hoursbaseline versus 24 hours post-treatmentassessed by dose shift of geometric mean methacholine PC20 data
Change from baseline methacholine bronchoprotection at 48 hoursbaseline versus 48 hours post-treatmentassessed by dose shift of geometric mean methacholine PC20 data

Countries

Canada

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Mar 9, 2026