The primary objective of this study is to assess tolerability and effect of HS (hypertonic saline) delivered with the tPAD (transnasal Pulmonary Aerosol Delivery) device on mucociliary clearance (MCC) in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease/chronic bronchitis (COPD/CB) subjects. The investigators hypothesize that HS delivery via tPAD will be safe and and while, and will improve MCC.
The beneficial effects of inhaled HS in CF patients (cystic fibrosis) have been well established. Concerns over safety and intolerability in patients with COPD/CB, based in part upon experiences with ultrasonic delivery devices, have limited interest in further exploring this therapeutic option. Although our clinical data suggests that HS delivered via jet nebulizer is generally well tolerated in patients with COPD/CB, our pre-clinical data suggests that cell shrinkage, the release of proinflammatory cytokines (i.e. IL-8), and transient cilia stasis is dependent upon the rate of aerosol delivery. Slow/continuous delivery may avoid most/all of these detrimental effects while promoting an even greater cumulative ASL (airway surface liquid) volume increase. To translate these data into a feasible treatment strategy, a comfortable, quiet delivery device that can be used for long time periods (i.e. overnight) was developed to slowly deliver HS via a nasal cannula device while avoiding aerosol rain-out in the device's tubing. Use of a computational model (MPPD: Multiple-Path Particle Dosimetry V2.0) predicts that this device, which generates a 2 um MMAD aerosol particle, will achieve -5-8% lung deposition. When tuned to an output of \~0.033 ml/min, 8 hours of use is predicted to deposit a minimum of 140 mg of NaCI onto airway surfaces. This compares favorably to the estimated mass delivered via jet nebulizer in the clinically successful study of HS in CF (110 mg/day, assuming 19.75% deposition fraction with the Pari LC PLUS). The proposed study is a single site, randomized, open label, cross-over trial designed to measure the tolerability and effect on mucociliary clearance following 7% HS delivered via tPAD for eight hours overnight to COPD/CB subjects. Comparison will be to measurements made following no treatment during an overnight stay. COPD/CB subjects meeting inclusion and exclusion criteria will be enrolled in the study. All study procedures will be conducted in the Clinical Translational Research Center (CTRC) at UNC Hospitals and the EPA building on Mason Farm Rd on the UNC Hospitals campus.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
OTHER
Masking
NONE
7% NaCl administered continuously for 8 hours, overnight, via the tPAD device
Subjects will receive overnight treatments of 7% HS via the tPAD device in both comparators, but in a randomly assigned order as described.
University of North Carolina Chapel Hill
Chapel Hill, North Carolina, United States
Mucociliary Clearance Rate (MCC60)
The primary study outcome, MCC60, will serve as the primary descriptor of the mucociliary clearance rate. This assay will be begun as quickly as possible after competing the tPAD treatment (\<60 minutes in all cases). MCC60 is derived by calculating the average rate of particle clearance observed during the first 60 minutes of the MCC scan procedure (MCC60; units = % cleared/time), using clearance values determined every 10 minutes for 60 minutes following inhalation of radiolabeled particles. Results obtained immediately after tPAD treatment will be compared to baseline values. Similarly, average clearance through other time domains (30 min, 90 min, 24 hrs), and from specific regions of interest (central lung; peripheral lung) will be reported as secondary MCC outcomes.
Time frame: The MCC outcome measure will be performed as quickly as possible (within 60 minutes) after overnight tPAD treatment
Symptom survey
A customized survey of nasal, sleep, and respiratory symptoms will be administered to qualitatively assess the experience with the tPAD device.
Time frame: The outcome measure will be assessed after visits 1 and 3, immediately following each overnight visit (tPAD vs. no treatment)
Spirometry
For treatment visits, spirometry will be obtained before treatment and after the overnight treatment following the MCC study to assess safety of the assigned interventions.
Time frame: Spirometry will be performed before each treatment visit (tPAD vs. no treatment) on Visit 1 and 3, and again after completing the assigned treatment, approximately 12 hours later
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