RecruitingPhase 2NCT03885245

Supplementing L-citrulline to Overweight Late Asthma oNset Phenotypes

Supplementing L-citrulline to Overweight Late Asthma oNset Phenotypes to Increase Airway L-arginine/ADMA Ratio and Improve Asthma Control


Sponsor

University of Colorado, Denver

Enrollment

60 participants

Start Date

Oct 1, 2021

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Conditions

Summary

Patients with obese late onset (after childhood) asthma can have lower FeNO levels, yet be highly symptomatic and poorly responsive to inhaled steroids. This is a common asthma phenotype, particularly among females. This reduction of NO occurs through increased arginase activity and uncoupling of NO synthase (NOS), by accumulation of asymmetric di-methyl arginine (ADMA), which further lowers the L-arginine/ADMA ratio, preferentially promoting reactive oxygen species (ROS) formation and inflammation at the expense of NO. Indeed, in patients with obese late onset asthma, lower L-arginine/ADMA plasma ratios are associated with reduced FeNO, increased bronchial hyperreactivity, and greater asthma morbidity. In our pilot studies, the administration of L-citrulline, as an L-arginine donor, to patients with obese late onset asthma increased the L-arginine/ADMA ratio, FeNO levels, and improved asthma control and lung function. Therefore, the objectives of the protocol are to: a) determine the efficacy of L-citrulline, as an add-on treatment to improve the asthma control and lung function in obese late onset asthmatics; b) leverage the use of asthmatic and control cells to further understand obesity-related changes in epithelial airway NO metabolism, and how these changes relate to bronchoconstriction and lung function, c) determine airway epithelial changes in mitochondrial function and bioenergetics in obese late onset asthmatics and how these are modified by L-citrulline. To do this, 54 obese late onset asthmatics with suboptimal control will be blindly randomized, in a cross over study, comparing 15g/day of L-citrulline vs. placebo, in two 8-week treatment periods with a 6-week washout in between. The co-primary study outcomes are asthma control (ACQ, ACT) and FeNO, and secondary endpoints plasma L-arginine/ADMA, FEV1 and PC20 methacholine. Parallel to this study, a small study of 10 healthy obese controls will receive open label L-citrulline for 7 weeks to establish comparative reference values for the study aims. During the initial treatment phase, 50% of study participants will be randomly allocated to undergo pre and post L-citrulline treatment bronchoscopy to obtain BAL and airway epithelial cells. The research group proposing this study is highly experience in asthma clinical trials, implementation of cross over design studies, and in the use of research bronchoscopies.


Eligibility

Min Age: 18 YearsMax Age: 65 Years

Plain Language Summary

Simplified for easier understanding

This study is testing whether a supplement called L-citrulline — an amino acid found naturally in watermelon — can help control asthma in overweight adults whose asthma started later in life and does not involve the typical airway inflammation (non-eosinophilic type). These patients often do not respond as well to standard inhaled steroid treatments. **You may be eligible if...** - You have a doctor's diagnosis of asthma that started when you were 12 years or older - You are overweight or obese (BMI of 30 or higher) - You are on standard asthma controller medications - Your asthma is not well-controlled based on questionnaire scores - Your airway inflammation marker (FeNO) is 30 ppb or below - Your smoking history is 10 pack-years or less and you have not smoked in the last 3 months **You may NOT be eligible if...** - You have had a respiratory infection in the past 4 weeks - You are pregnant - You have significant kidney disease or other serious medical conditions - Your asthma has been unstable or required emergency treatment recently Talk to your doctor to see if this trial is right for you.

This summary was AI-generated to explain the trial in plain language. It is not medical advice. Always discuss eligibility with your doctor before enrolling in a clinical trial.

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Interventions

DRUGL-ctirulline

7 weeks of treatment with 15 g/day of orally administered (powder form mixed with water) L-citrulline

DRUGMatching Placebo

7 weeks of treatment with orally administered matching placebo (to 15 g/day of L-citrulline)


Locations(1)

Duke University (Asthma, Allergy and Airway Center)

Durham, North Carolina, United States

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NCT03885245


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