Actively Recruiting
Trial Evaluating the Rate of Pneumothorax in Severe Emphysema Secondary to Endoscopic Volume Reduction With Two-stage ZEPHYR® Valves Versus Endoscopic Volume Reduction With One-stage ZEPHYR® Valves
Led by University Hospital, Limoges · Updated on 2025-03-18
244
Participants Needed
15
Research Sites
160 weeks
Total Duration
On this page
AI-Summary
What this Trial Is About
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) affects 3.5 million people and is the third leading cause of death worldwide. Emphysema involves air retention in the lungs and is ultimately responsible for a major deterioration in the quality of life. Available drug treatments have moderate efficacy whereas surgical lung volume reduction can improve exercise capacity when offered to a very selected population but at the cost of significant morbidity and mortality. Endoscopic Lung Volume reduction with ZEPHYR® valves improves respiratory function at rest, exercise tolerance and quality of life in patients with little or no interlobar collateral ventilation. If this technique has therefore proven its effectiveness, it is not devoid of complications and is notably responsible for pneumothorax in 27% of cases. The management of this complication is clearly codified, ranging from patient monitoring to the removal of one or more valves. It is therefore a subject of major concern for multiple reasons: high incidence, lengthening of hospital stay, increase in the overall cost of care, potential loss of benefit for the patient in the event of permanent withdrawal. valves and above all a potentially fatal event. A new strategy for implanting ZEPHYR® valves in two stages has been developed in Limoges University Hospital. This innovative algorithm has been evaluated in several non-comparative single or multicenter studies. In those studies, pneumothorax' rate secondary to lung volume reduction with endobronchial valves is rated between 4.5 and 12%. The efficacy of the treatment appears to be comparable with the data found in the trials evaluating in which the entire lobe was treated in one procedure. Moreover, despite two procedures, there does not seem to be any increased risk of occurrence of other complications. Finally, the systematic scheduling of a thoracic computed tomography between the two procedures showed that 26.6% of patients presented a reduction in volume greater than 350mL despite incomplete treatment. These data seem promising but no direct comparison with standard one-step treatment has ever been conducted so far.
CONDITIONS
Official Title
Trial Evaluating the Rate of Pneumothorax in Severe Emphysema Secondary to Endoscopic Volume Reduction With Two-stage ZEPHYR® Valves Versus Endoscopic Volume Reduction With One-stage ZEPHYR® Valves
Who Can Participate
Eligibility Criteria
You may qualify if you...
- Able to give informed consent and participate in the study
- Age between 35 and 80 years at consent
- Emphysema (homogeneous or heterogeneous) confirmed by CT scan within 6 months
- At least 50% destruction of the target lung lobe on chest CT
- Quit smoking for at least 3 months
- Dyspnea score of 2 or higher on the modified Medical Research Council questionnaire
- Post-bronchodilator FEV between 15% and 50% of predicted
- Post-bronchodilator total lung capacity at least 100% of predicted
- Post-bronchodilator residual volume at least 175% of predicted
- Able to walk at least 100 meters during a 6-minute walk test
- Member or beneficiary of a social security scheme
You will not qualify if you...
- Main diagnosis of asthma
- More than 3 exacerbations in the past year or 2 requiring hospitalization
- Myocardial infarction or stroke within 6 months before inclusion
- Symptoms of heart failure within 6 months before inclusion
- Chest CT abnormalities: giant bulla occupying more than one third of the lung, paraseptal emphysema, pulmonary nodule larger than 0.8 cm (unless stable for over a year), fibrosing interstitial pneumonitis, or dilated bronchi
- Pulmonary tomoscintigraphy showing mismatch between perfusion and emphysema destruction
- Hypoxemia (PaO2 < 45 mmHg) or hypercapnia (PaCO2 > 55 mmHg) on arterial blood gas in ambient air
- Echocardiography showing left ventricular ejection fraction below 45% or pulmonary artery pressure over 45 mmHg
- History of pneumonectomy or lung surgery on the same side as the target lobe
- History of pneumothorax on the same side as the target lobe
- Previous endoscopic volume reduction treatment
- Oral corticosteroid therapy over 20 mg/day within 4 weeks before inclusion
- Symptomatic bronchial dilations or colonization with certain resistant bacteria or fungi
- Metastatic cancer under treatment or treated less than 5 years ago
- Pregnant or breastfeeding women
- Nickel allergy
- Under guardianship, curatorship, or judicial protection
- Participation in another interventional clinical study
- Any condition that may interfere with study objectives or cause suboptimal participation
- Evidence of collateral ventilation as measured by the Chartis system
AI-Screening
AI-Powered Screening
Complete this quick 3-step screening to check your eligibility
Trial Site Locations
Total: 15 locations
1
CHU de Bordeaux
Bordeaux, France, 33000
Actively Recruiting
2
CHU de Brest
Brest, France, 29000
Actively Recruiting
3
CHU de Dijon
Dijon, France, 21000
Actively Recruiting
4
chu de Grenoble
Grenoble, France, 38000
Actively Recruiting
5
CHU de Lille
Lille, France, 59000
Actively Recruiting
6
CHU de Limoges
Limoges, France, 87000
Actively Recruiting
7
APHM
Marseille, France, 13000
Actively Recruiting
8
Hopital Saint Joseph
Marseille, France, 13000
Actively Recruiting
9
CHU de Nice
Nice, France, 06000
Not Yet Recruiting
10
APHP
Paris, France, 75018
Actively Recruiting
11
APHP
Paris, France, 78014
Not Yet Recruiting
12
CHU de Rouen
Rouen, France, 76000
Not Yet Recruiting
13
chu de Strasbourg
Strasbourg, France, 67000
Actively Recruiting
14
Hopital Foch
Suresnes, France, 92150
Actively Recruiting
15
chu de Toulouse
Toulouse, France, 31000
Actively Recruiting
Research Team
T
Thomas EGENOD, MD
CONTACT
E
Eloise DOBBELS, MD
CONTACT
How is the study designed?
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Masking
NONE
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Model
PARALLEL
Primary Purpose
TREATMENT
Number of Arms
2
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