9 Clinical Trials for Various Conditions
This is a multicenter, prospective, observational study designed to determine the clinical sensitivity and specificity of the Abionic IVD CAPSULE Allergic Asthma panel performed on Abionic's abioSCOPE device using K3-EDTA anticoagulated plasma samples from atopic and non-atopic pediatric and adult patients. Patients' sensitization determined with the abioSCOPE will be compared to the clinical assessment of allergy.
This is a multicenter, prospective, observational study to evaluate the analytical performance of the Abionic IgE Multi-Allergen Test Panel on the abioSCOPE® device in a U.S. point-of-care environment within a clinical laboratory operating under a CLIA certificate for tests of moderate complexity. The study will assess point-of-care ('external') precision, sample type comparison and correlation with a reference method (Phadia Laboratory System, ThermoFisher Scientific).
A research study of how house dust mite tablets work compared to placebo in children aged between 5 and 11 years and who have allergy to house dust mites (MATIC)
The objective of this study was to assess the efficacy and safety of 12 months of treatment with 300 IR of STG320 sublingual tablets compared with placebo in adults and adolescents with HDM-associated allergic rhinitis.
The trial involves two interventions: (i) exposure to HDM in the ACC and (ii) administration of dupilumab/placebo for dupilumab.
Most asthma is allergic in origin. The purpose of this study is to better understand the airway immune response to inhaled allergens in order to identify factors that promote asthma.
This is a research study intending to look at the response of a specific type of allergy cells in the blood (called T cells) to a a type of immunotherapy product known as SPIREs (Synthetic Peptide Immuno-Regulatory Epitopes), across a broad range of subjects. This is a non-interventional study in which no investigational product will be administered to any subject.
Twenty, house dust mite (HDM)-allergic non-smoking subjects with or without mild asthma between the ages 18-50 will be recruited. The primary endpoint will be nasal eosinophilia. Each volunteer will be screened with skin testing, pulmonary function testing and induced sputum. If eligible they will return for baseline nasal allergen challenge and lavage. Approximately two weeks later they will return for gamma tocopherol (gT) dosing visit. After completing 14 days of daily high dose (1200mg) gT, they will return for a second nasal allergen challenge. This visit will also include pulmonary function testing and blood draw. The purpose of this study is to determine if high dose gamma tocopherol therapy can reduce allergen induced nasal inflammation.
This study will investigate sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT), a treatment involving antigens placement under the tongue to help asthma sufferers build a tolerance to the allergy-causing substances. Specifically, this study will determine the effectiveness of SLIT at two different dosing regimens for patients with intermittent mild asthma caused by dust mites.