Actively Recruiting
Innate Immunity in COPD
Led by University of Edinburgh · Updated on 2025-06-11
189
Participants Needed
2
Research Sites
248 weeks
Total Duration
On this page
AI-Summary
What this Trial Is About
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) causes obstruction to airflow when breathing out. It is a leading cause of chronic lung disease, hospitalization and death. Smoking is the major cause of COPD but why some smokers develop COPD while others do not is poorly understood. A central feature of COPD is accumulation of inflammatory blood cells, macrophages and neutrophils, in the airway, leading to lung injury and airway damage. The small airways of many patients with COPD contain bacteria, which are absent in healthy smokers or non-smokers. These bacteria stimulate recruitment of neutrophils, macrophages and other inflammatory cells, further accelerating airway injury. The investigators and others have shown resident macrophages in the lung and inflammatory cells (neutrophils and macrophages) recruited from the blood, which normally clear bacteria, have reduced anti-bacterial capacity in COPD and that their altered function impairs the resolution of inflammation. The investigators now wish to test why these cells fail to clear bacteria focusing in particular on how they use molecules as food to generate energy, a process termed metabolism, since this is an important determinant of immune cell function. Comparison will be made between lung resident cells (obtained by performing bronchoscopy and washing a segment of lung to flush out immune cells) and those from the blood to determine if the alterations are specific to the lung. The investigators will identify alterations in responses to bacteria in relation to changes in metabolism . A major focus will be on how structures in the cell that normally are key for energy production (i.e. mitochondria) become dysfunctional and how this impacts responses to bacteria. The investigators will relate findings to the clinical features of COPD and to healthy non-smokers and smokers to separate smoking-related changes from COPD. The aim is to develop new approaches with which to treat and manage COPD.
CONDITIONS
Official Title
Innate Immunity in COPD
Who Can Participate
Eligibility Criteria
You may qualify if you...
- COPD patients aged 18 to 77 years who are GOLD Stage 1, 2, or 3, including those undergoing bronchoscopy for clinical reasons or donating blood only
- COPD patients aged 18 to 69 years who are GOLD Stage 1 or 2 for research bronchoscopy
- COPD diagnosis confirmed by chest X-ray or high-resolution CT scan within the last 12 months
- Ability to provide informed consent
- Healthy volunteers aged 18 to 77 years
- Ability to provide informed consent
You will not qualify if you...
- Active malignancy, immunosuppression, diabetes mellitus, chronic kidney disease, or liver failure
- History of anemia
- Blood donation exceeding 250 ml within the last 6 months
- Pregnancy or breastfeeding
- Current participation in other clinical trials not related to this study
- Febrile illness or symptoms of acute infection within the last 2 weeks
- Vaccination within the past 2 weeks
- Inability to communicate in English or provide informed consent
- For bronchoscopy: significant lung conditions contraindicating the procedure, including active lung infection (except asymptomatic colonization), malignancy, interstitial lung disease, additional pulmonary diagnoses besides COPD, asthma, or abnormal chest X-ray
- Forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1) less than 65% predicted according to guidelines
- Chronic or acute respiratory disease in healthy volunteers
- Any chronic medical condition or regular prescription medication use in healthy volunteers except oral contraceptives
AI-Screening
AI-Powered Screening
Complete this quick 3-step screening to check your eligibility
Trial Site Locations
Total: 2 locations
1
University of Edinburgh
Edinburgh, United Kingdom, EH16 4TJ
Not Yet Recruiting
2
Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh
Edinburgh, United Kingdom, EH16 5SA
Actively Recruiting
Research Team
D
David H Dockrell, MD
CONTACT
S
Sarah Walmsley, MD
CONTACT
How is the study designed?
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Masking
N/A
Allocation
N/A
Model
N/A
Primary Purpose
N/A
Number of Arms
3
Not the Right Trial for You?
Explore thousands of other clinical trials that might be a better match.
Sign up to get personalized trial recommendations delivered to your inbox.
Already have an account? Log in here