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RECRUITING
NCT07055542
NA

Creating A Risk Assessment Tool for Thunderstorm Asthma: the CARISTA Study

Sponsor: University of Melbourne

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Thunderstorm asthma is a recurring public health emergency in South-Eastern Australia which occurs in springtime. The major identified risk factors for thunderstorm asthma is hay fever and allergy to ryegrass pollen. The goal of the CARISTA study is to identify the risk of springtime allergic and thunderstorm asthma in allergic adults living in South-Eastern Australia. To do this the investigators will recruit 530 people who have hay fever and test them for allergy to ryegrass pollen and undertake simple lung function testing. The investigators will ask study participants to complete a customised symptom tracker over the springtime pollen season for 2 consecutive years. The outcome the investigators are looking for is an asthma exacerbation or worsening asthma symptoms. This study will enable the investigators to identify indicators (biomarkers) of severe and moderate asthma exacerbations in order to identify those at risk of thunderstorm and seasonal asthma so protective treatments and strategies can be advised.

Official title: Creating A RIsk Assessment Biomarker Tool to Prevent Seasonal and Thunderstorm Asthma: The CARISTA Study

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - 70 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

530

Start Date

2025-08-27

Completion Date

2030-12-31

Last Updated

2025-09-04

Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Interventions

DIAGNOSTIC_TEST

Observational

Prospective observational study

Locations (1)

The Royal Melbourne Hospital

Parkville, Victoria, Australia