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HomeLung & BreathingA Study Assessing the Effect of Dupilumab on…

A Study Assessing the Effect of Dupilumab on Inducing Clinical Remission in Asthma

25 March 2026 Read original ↗
🅇 This trial is currently recruiting participants in the UK
Speak to your GP or specialist first. They can help you understand if you might be eligible and what taking part would involve.

🔬 This trial is currently recruiting participants

If you match the criteria below, you may be able to take part. Ask your doctor about this trial or contact the trial team directly.

Status
Recruiting
Trial Phase
PHASE3
Who Can Join
ALL
Age Range
18 Years – 79 Years

About This Trial

This study tests whether an asthma medication called dupilumab can help people achieve complete asthma control (called "remission") when given earlier in their disease, before asthma becomes severe. Currently, most people with asthma only receive advanced treatments like biologics after their condition has worsened significantly and caused lung damage. This study explores whether treating high-risk patients earlier could prevent asthma attacks and lung function decline, potentially achieving remission before permanent damage occurs. The study is looking for adults aged 18-79 with moderate asthma who have had at least one asthma attack requiring steroid pills in the past 2 years, use medium or high-dose inhaled steroids regularly, have high levels of inflammation markers in their blood and breath tests, but don't yet meet criteria for severe asthma requiring biologic therapy. Participants receive either dupilumab or placebo injections every 2 weeks for one year, alongside their regular asthma medications. They attend clinic visits every 3 months for breathing tests, questionnaires, and safety monitoring. Neither participants nor doctors know who receives the real medication until the study ends. The goal is to learn whether early treatment with dupilumab helps more people achieve complete asthma control compared to standard care alone, potentially changing how asthma is treated from "waiting until severe" to "preventing severe disease." The study runs in Canada, the United Kingdom, and Australia, involving 150 participants

Run by

Université de Sherbrooke

⚕️ Before you apply: Talk to your GP or specialist about whether this trial might be right for you. Never stop existing treatment without medical advice. Trial ID: NCT07309614
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