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Prospective Surveillance of Lung Development During Childhood, Adolescence and Adulthood in Healthy and Patients With Cystic Fibrosis

Prospective Surveillance of Lung Development During Childhood, Adolescence and Adulthood in Healthy and Patients With Cystic Fibrosis

Status
Active, not recruiting
Phases
Unknown
Study type
Observational
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT04395820
Acronym
Prospective
Enrollment
250
Registered
2020-05-20
Start date
2020-07-01
Completion date
2100-12-01
Last updated
2020-11-04

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

Conditions

Cystic Fibrosis, Healthy

Keywords

Cystic Fibrosis, MBW, MRI, Airway growth, Airway development, Healthy

Brief summary

Cystic fibrosis (CF) is the most common lethal inherited disease in Caucasian populations. To improve survival, it is essential to understand the development, progression and treatment of CF lung disease throughout early childhood. Therefore the overall objective is to prospectively assess the clinical utility of novel and non-invasive measuring methods, namely Multiple Breath Washout and functional lung MRI in the longitudinal clinical surveillance of patients with CF and compare the results to those of healthy controls.

Detailed description

Background and project rationale: Cystic fibrosis (CF), the most common lethal inherited disease in Caucasian populations, affects approximately 1:2500 live births. It is a multisystem disorder with respiratory morbidity and mortality being the leading cause of death. Despite improved survival in successive birth cohorts, the current median survival age of patients with CF is about 40 years. To improve survival, it is essential to understand the development, progression and treatment of CF lung disease throughout early childhood. Therefore tracking of lung function throughout childhood may provide important insights into the development and progression of CF lung disease. Spirometry, the standard lung function test for decades, is sensitive only for airflow limitation arising in large airways and insensitive for assessment of small or peripheral airway involvement, whereby the CF lung disease emerges in the small airways. Two promising techniques to assess small airway function in young children include the multiple breath washout (MBW) lung function test and functional Matrix-Pencil magnetic resonance imaging (MP-MRI). Project Objectives and Design: The overall objective of this project is to prospectively assess the clinical utility of MBW and MP-MRI in the longitudinal clinical surveillance of patients with CF. Therefore this study: i) Examines differences in MBW and MP-MRI outcomes between patients with CF and healthy controls. ii) Assesses the short term (over 1h) repeatability of MBW and MP-MRI outcomes in patients with CF and healthy controls. iii) Assesses whether MBW and MP-MRI outcomes are associated with clinical lung disease in patients with CF. iv) Determines whether changes in MBW and MP-MRI outcomes are associated with progression of lung disease in patients with CF. v) Compares the breath-by-breath regional and temporal changes in functional MRI signal with breath-by-breath changes in MBW phase outcomes in patients with CF and healthy controls. Methods: Data of MBW, MP-MRI, morphological MRI, Spirometry and body plethysmography, clinical respiratory symptoms and microbiology will be collected during this study. Recruitment and participation: Children and adults with CF will be recruited from the outpatient and inpatient clinics at the Inselspital in Bern. Healthy controls will be recruited from the local community in Bern and surrounding areas. Information collected: Lung function: * Multiple Breath Washout (FRC, LCI, Scond, Sacin) * Spirometry (FEV1, FVC, FEFx) * Body plethysmography (sReff, FRCpletz, TLC) Respiratory symptoms and clinical data: CF: * respiratory symptoms (cough, sputum characteristics, shortness of breath, weight loss, appetite fatigue) * clinical data (increased work of breathing, hypoxemia, wheeze, crackles, differential air entry) Healthy controls: Presence of respiratory symptoms in the last four weeks preceding visit. Functional and structural MRI: * Functional MRI (percentage of the lung volume with impaired fractional ventilation (RFV) and relative perfusion (RQ) * Structural MRI( Eichinger MRI scoring system to assess the presence and extent of bronchiectasis, mucous plugging, and air trapping) Medical history: CF: demographics, genetic mutation, pulmonary exacerbations, hospitalisations, regular therapy and medication, complications, microbiological data and laboratory reports Microbiology: CF: bacterial analysis of oropharyngeal swabs Quality of life: CF: CF-specific quality of life and symptoms Sputum: CF: * spontaneously expectorated sputum * Induced sputum Study database: All study data is recorded in an Access-database with SQL Servers. The database is accordant to the HFG and was adapted together with the CTU. Funding: The Swiss National Foundation (32003B\_182719) and Vertex-Pharmaceuticals Cystic Fibrosis Research Innovation Award provide financial and material support for this observational study

Interventions

DIAGNOSTIC_TESTLung function test

MBW

DIAGNOSTIC_TESTImaging

MP-MRI

Sponsors

Insel Gruppe AG, University Hospital Bern
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Observational model
COHORT
Time perspective
PROSPECTIVE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
3 Years to 18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

Individuals with CF: * Diagnosis of CF * Signed written informed consent * ≥3 - 18 years of age, depending on the cooperation and if lung function measurements are possible Healthy volunteers: * Signed written informed consent * Informed consent of participant and if under 18 years, legal representative respectively * Children and adults with no history of chronic lung disease or acute respiratory infection in the four weeks prior to the study visit * ≥3 - 18 years of age, depending on the cooperation and if lung function measurements are possible

Exclusion criteria

The presence of any one of the following

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Multiple Breath WashoutEvery third month up to 50 years. Healthy controls only during 1 year.Longitudinal assessment of lung volume and ventilation inhomogeneity
Functional MP-MRIEvery twelfth month up to 50 years. Healthy controls only during 1 year (2 time points).Longitudinal assessment of percentage of the lung volume with impaired fractional ventilation and relative perfusion

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Spirometry: FVCEvery third month up to 50 years. Healthy controls only during 1 year.Longitudinal assessment of forced vital capacity.
Spirometry: FEFEvery third month up to 50 years. Healthy controls only during 1 year.Longitudinal assessment of forced expiratory flows.
Body plethysmography: sRAWEvery third month up to 50 years. Healthy controls only during 1 year.Longitudinal assessment of specific airway resistance.
Body plethysmography: FRCEvery third month up to 50 years. Healthy controls only during 1 year.Longitudinal assessment of functional residual capacity.
Body plethysmography: TLCEvery third month up to 50 years. Healthy controls only during 1 year.Longitudinal assessment of total lung capacity.
Morphological MRIEvery twelfth month up to 50 years. Healthy controls only during 1 year (2 time points)Longitudinal assessment of the presence and extent of bronchiectasis, mucous plugging and air trapping by Eichinger MRI scoring.
ExacerbationsEvery third month up to 50 years. Only CF patients.Longitudinal assessment of clinical status.
CF-related quality of lifeEvery third month up to 50 years. Only CF patients.Longitudinal assessment of standardised age-specific CF-related quality of life questions.The scale goes from 0-100, higher score means better outcome.
Microbiology: presence of respiratory pathogensEvery third month up to 50 years. Only CF patients.Longitudinal assessment of presence of respiratory pathogens from oropharyngeal swabs and sputum samples.
Microbiology: abundance of respiratory pathogensEvery third month up to 50 years. Only CF patients.Longitudinal assessment of abundance of respiratory pathogens from oropharyngeal swabs and sputum samples.
Respiratory symptomsEvery third month up to 50 years. Only CF patients.Longitudinal assessment of clinical respiratory symptoms.
Spirometry: FEV1Every third month up to 50 years. Healthy controls only during 1 year.Longitudinal assessment of forced expired volume in 1 second.

Countries

Switzerland

Outcome results

None listed

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