CARE Network Maintenance Versus Intermittent Inhaled Steroids in Wheezing Toddlers (MIST)



Status:Completed
Conditions:Asthma, Pulmonary
Therapuetic Areas:Pulmonary / Respiratory Diseases
Healthy:No
Age Range:Any
Updated:6/28/2018
Start Date:August 2008
End Date:July 2010

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Childhood Asthma Research and Education (CARE) Network Trial - Maintenance Versus Intermittent Inhaled Steroids in Wheezing Toddlers (MIST)

Asthma affects about 4 million children in the United States and is a leading cause of
hospitalizations and school absenteeism. Continuous wheezing in very young children may
develop into asthma. Low doses of inhaled corticosteroids (ICS) are commonly prescribed to
treat children with particularly bad wheezing episodes. This study will compare the safety
and effectiveness of low doses of ICS taken daily versus higher doses of ICS taken only
during respiratory tract illnesses for toddlers with continuous wheezing or coughing
illnesses.

Childhood asthma can be caused by many factors, including allergens, cigarette smoke, air
pollution, or infections. Symptoms include wheezing, shortness of breath, chest tightness,
and coughing. Wheezing illnesses are common during the first several years of life, and
continuous wheezing, or recurrent intermittent wheezing, may be an indicator of asthma.
Recurrent intermittent wheezing can also lead to breathing difficulties, sleep disturbances,
and severe exacerbations that result in emergency department visits, hospitalizations, or
even death. The Prevention of Early Asthma in Kids (PEAK) and Acute Intervention Management
Strategies (AIMS) studies, both of which are part of the Childhood Asthma Research and
Education (CARE) Network, as well as several other studies, have identified therapies that
may improve recurrent wheezing in young children. This study will compare the safety and
effectiveness of two treatment regimens—low doses of ICS taken on a daily basis versus higher
doses of ICS taken only during respiratory tract illnesses—at improving recurrent wheezing in
toddlers. Study researchers will also identify individual characteristics (e.g., age, gender,
family history of asthma and allergies, the degree of allergy, genetics) that may be
associated with treatment response. Lastly, the relationship of virus infections to
respiratory illnesses, wheezing episodes, and response to study treatments will also be
studied.

This study will enroll children between 12 and 53 months of age who have experienced episodes
of wheezing or coughing in the year before study entry, with at least one episode that
required one of the following: oral steroids, an urgent unscheduled medical visit, an
emergency room visit, or hospitalization. This study will begin with a 2-week evaluation
period during which potential participants will receive placebo once a day. Parents will
document their child's asthma symptoms and medication use in a daily diary. Next, at a
baseline study visit, eligible participants will be randomly assigned to one of the following
two 12-month treatment groups:

- Group 1 participants will receive a low dose of ICS once a day at night, except during
respiratory tract illnesses. During a respiratory tract illness, participants will
receive placebo each morning and a low dose of ICS each night for 7 days.

- Group 2 participants will receive a high dose of ICS twice a day for 7 days during each
respiratory illness and placebo once a day at night at all other times.

Throughout the 12 months of treatment, all participants will receive albuterol to treat
respiratory symptoms and prednisolone if asthma symptoms worsen. Parents will be given an
action plan to help manage their child's symptoms, and during respiratory illnesses, parents
will contact study researchers to determine the best treatment plan. Study visits will occur
at baseline and Weeks 4, 12, 20, 28, 36, 44, and 52. Participants' parents will take part in
scheduled telephone interviews one month after each clinic visit to provide information on
their child's asthma symptoms, study medication use, and health problems. Most study visits
will include a physical exam and lung function testing. At select study visits, the following
will occur: allergy skin testing, blood collection, nasal mucus sampling, and parent
questionnaires to assess asthma, quality of life, and environmental factors. A portion of the
participants' blood will undergo genetic analysis; a blood collection from parents for
genetic analysis will be optional. Throughout the treatment period, participants' parents
will record asthma symptoms and medication usage in a daily diary.

Inclusion Criteria at Screening Visit:

Participants who meet all of the following criteria are eligible for study entry.
Participants may be reassessed if not initially eligible.

- Positive asthma predictive index (API) status

- A history of at least 4 wheezing episodes in the prior year with at least one
physician diagnosed or at least 3 wheezing episodes in the prior year with at least
one physician diagnosed and at least 3 months of asthma controller therapy in the
prior year

- Experienced a severe exacerbation requiring systemic corticosteroids, urgent
unscheduled or emergency visit, or hospitalization in the 12 months before the
screening visit

- All immunizations must be completed, including varicella (unless the child has already
had clinical varicella). If the child needs the varicella vaccine, this will be
arranged with the primary care physician and must be received before study entry.

- Allows blood to be used for genetic analysis

- Willingness to provide informed consent by the child's parent or guardian

Exclusion Criteria at Screening Visit:

Participants who meet any of the following criteria are NOT eligible for enrollment, but
they may be re-enrolled if these exclusion criteria disappear:

- Use of more than six courses of systemic corticosteroids in the 12 months before the
screening visit

- More than two hospitalizations for wheezing illnesses in the 12 months before the
screening visit

- Use of oral or systemic corticosteroids in the 2 weeks before the screening visit

- Current treatment with antibiotics for diagnosed sinus disease

- Current participation or has participated in the month before the screening visit in
another investigational drug trial

- Evidence that the family may be unreliable or nonadherent, or may move from the
clinical center area before trial completion

- Medically unable to use systemic corticosteroids

- Clinically relevant gastroesophageal reflux

- Inability of the child to cooperate with nebulizer therapy

Participants who meet any of the following criteria are NOT eligible for enrollment, and
they may not be re-enrolled:

- Gestation less than late preterm, as defined as birth before 34 weeks gestational age

- Significant developmental delay/failure to thrive, defined as crossing of two major
percentile lines during the last year for age and gender. If a child plots less than
the 10th percentile for age and gender, a growth chart for the previous year will be
obtained from the child's primary care provider.

- Head circumference less than the 3rd percentile or greater than the 97th percentile
unless medical evaluation documents no associated illness

- Presence of lung disease other than asthma, such as cystic fibrosis and
bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD). Evaluation during the screening process will assure
that an adequate evaluation of other lung diseases has been performed.

- Presence of other significant medical illnesses (e.g., cardiac, liver,
gastrointestinal, endocrine) that would place the child at increased risk of
participating in the study

- Immunodeficiency disorders

- History of respiratory failure requiring mechanical ventilation

- History of hypoxic seizure

- History of significant adverse reaction to any study medication ingredient

Exclusion Criteria at Baseline Visit:

Participants will be ineligible to continue in the study and be randomly assigned to a
treatment group if any of the following is documented during the 2-week observation period,
but they may be re-enrolled if these exclusion criteria disappear:

- Persistent symptomatic asthma, as defined as experiencing symptoms requiring albuterol
use on average three or more days per week or two or more night time awakenings due to
asthma-associated symptoms

- Inadequate adherence (less than 75% of days) to diary card completion or nebulizer
medication use

- Use of any asthma medication except albuterol (used on as needed basis)
We found this trial at
5
sites
660 S Euclid Ave
Saint Louis, Missouri 63110
(314) 362-5000
Washington University School of Medicine Washington University Physicians is the clinical practice of the School...
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Denver, CO
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Madison, Wisconsin 53706
(608) 263-2400
University of Wisconsin-Madison In achievement and prestige, the University of Wisconsin-Madison has long been recognized...
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Madison, WI
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34800 Bob Wilson Drive
San Diego, California 92120
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San Diego, CA
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Tucson, AZ
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