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RECRUITING
NCT05050903

Early Antiviral Responses to Rhinovirus Infection in Asthma

Sponsor: Imperial College London

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

The bulk of the morbidity and mortality related to asthma is during periods of acutely increased symptomatology called 'exacerbations'. Roughly half of asthma sufferers experience such an exacerbation each year. Most of these events are triggered by viral infections, usually the common cold virus (rhinovirus). A key part of the body's defence against viral infections is to produce antiviral proteins called 'interferons', which have a myriad of effects to stop viruses. Previous work on cells taken from volunteers with asthma and healthy controls and infected with rhinovirus in the lab suggests interferon production is impaired in asthma. However when human volunteers with asthma are infected with rhinovirus, high levels of interferon are found a few days later - along with high numbers of virus. Whether the high virus numbers are the result of an initially weak interferon response, with subsequently unchecked viral replication leading to exaggerated interferon levels, is unknown as no one has measured interferons early in infection. By infecting volunteers with asthma and healthy controls with rhinovirus at a known time, only done in a handful of centres worldwide, we will be able to measure interferons within hours of infection and well before symptoms develop.

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - 55 Years

Study Type

OBSERVATIONAL

Enrollment

40

Start Date

2022-08-11

Completion Date

2025-08-31

Last Updated

2024-04-24

Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Conditions

Interventions

OTHER

Rhinovirus infection

Inoculation with rhinovirus-16

Locations (1)

Imperial College Respiratory Research Unit, St Mary's Hospital

London, Greater London, United Kingdom