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Air Pollution: Strategies for Personalized Intervention to Reduce Exposure

ASPIRE: Air Pollution: Strategies for Personalized Intervention to Reduce Exposure

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT03744871
Acronym
ASPIRE
Enrollment
30
Registered
2018-11-16
Start date
2019-03-22
Completion date
2023-07-31
Last updated
2023-12-04

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

Conditions

Air Pollution

Brief summary

Fine particulate matter \< 2.5 microns (PM2.5) air pollution is a leading global risk factor for cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. PM2.5 presents a serious ongoing public health threat to patients living in highly-polluted countries (ex: China, India) where air quality is projected to remain extremely poor (far exceeding World Health Organization Air Quality Guidelines) for the foreseeable future. This study reviews the benefits of personal level intervention (wearing N95 respirator) over long term, to prevent clinical events among patients with cardiovascular disease.

Detailed description

CLEANAIR-ACS will be an investigation within ASPIRE, that will test the ability of personal-level intervention (N95 respirators) to improve validated surrogate markers of cardio-metabolic health in patients with a recent Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS). Patients with ACS are a vulnerable patient population with vulnerability and at risk for future cardiovascular events. This vanguard phase study in Beijing involving patients exposed to high levels of air pollution who have recently sustained an ACS event, is necessary to obtain feasibility data and gather a battery of information allowing for the appropriate design of a larger clinical outcome trial. What is more, positive results would provide critically-important information demonstrating for the first time that it is feasible to prescribe the use of these personal protection devices to cardiac patients, and that their usage is capable of translating into demonstrable health benefits (i.e., improved BP and insulin sensitivity) over the long-term. The study hypothesis is that long-term personal-level interventions to reduce exposure to PM2.5 can be feasibly performed for 1-year post-acute coronary syndrome (ACS) and will result in significant improvements in validated surrogate cardiometabolic endpoints predictive of morbidity/mortality.

Interventions

SiTi N95 respirator with microventilator (change twice weekly and earlier as needed).

Sponsors

University of Michigan
CollaboratorOTHER
Peking University
CollaboratorOTHER
University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

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

Inclusion criteria

1. Male or female \>18, able to provide informed consent and willingness to complete the study protocol and measurement procedures, AND 2. Non-smoker of any type (cigarette, cigar, marijuana) during past six months (100% abstinence per self-report) and living in a non-smoking household (no person living in the household smoking at home) with confirmation of non-smoking status by urinary cotinine levels. AND 3. A diagnosis of myocardial infarction or unstable angina 7-90 days prior to signed informed consent

Exclusion criteria

1. Inability for mental or physical reasons to understand and comply with the informed consent process and/or the study protocol procedures including wearing face mask (i.e: advanced COPD/lung disease requiring use of frequent inhalational or nebulizer treatments) per investigator discretion. 2. Obesity with arm circumference \>18 inches preventing accurate BP determination during ABPM monitoring 3. Significant hemodynamically unstable CV disorder including uncompensated heart failure, refractory angina, uncontrolled arrhythmias, critical valvular heart disease and severe hypertension. (as further described in Appendix B) at screening 4. ESRD on dialysis or patients that have received dialysis within 14 days prior to screening 5. Subject has a history of infection with human immunodeficiency virus 6. Subject has a history of alcohol or substance abuse within the 6 months prior to the screening 7. Advanced COPD on home oxygen 8. Past diagnosis of sleep apnea either untreated or treated with CPAP 9. History of malignancy including leukemia and lymphoma (but not basal cell skin cancer, cured squamous cell cancer and localized Prostate cancer) AND/OR any severe, life-threatening disease AND/OR history of drug abuse within the last 2 years 10. Regular use of any over-the-counter drug, recreational medication including stimulants (amphetamines) and/or complimentary or herbal therapy that might impact study outcomes including BP and insulin sensitivity per investigator discretion. 11. In women of childbearing age: pregnancy, non-use of approved method of birth control, intent to get pregnant during the study period 12. Patients with passive home cigarette smoking 13. Other medical or psychosocial conditions or life circumstances that may put the subject at increased risk of participation or jeopardizes the scientific integrity of the study, as determined by the investigators \-

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Blood Pressure12 monthsUse Omron 907xl for clinic BP Measures, with 3 repeated measurements after 5 minutes after clinicians leave room (patient unattended). Averages of the 3 BP Recordings will be obtained

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
PWV and pulse wave analysis12 monthsTo be measured at clinic visits, with Omron used in JI Study
BP/HRV Monitoring12 months24 hour ambulatory HRV/BP will be placed when clinic BP is complete as the first clinic measure. The monitoring systems have been used in JI study previously

Countries

China, United States

Outcome results

None listed

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