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Asthma Clinical Trials

Find recruiting clinical trials for asthma in the UK — including severe asthma, eosinophilic asthma, and allergic asthma subtypes. See treatment pathways and where trials fit in.

Free to use — Live data from ClinicalTrials.gov — Updated hourly

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Asthma Treatment Pathway

See where clinical trials fit into your treatment journey

Mild Persistent

Regular controller therapy needed

Standard: Low-dose inhaled corticosteroids (ICS)

Moderate Persistent

Symptoms despite low-dose therapy

Standard: Medium-dose ICS + LABA (e.g. Seretide, Symbicort)

Severe Asthma

Uncontrolled despite high-dose therapy

Standard: Biologics (Omalizumab, Mepolizumab, Dupilumab, Benralizumab)

Eosinophilic Asthma

High eosinophil counts driving inflammation

Standard: Anti-IL5 therapy (Mepolizumab, Benralizumab) or Anti-IL4Rα (Dupilumab)

About Asthma

Severe Asthma

Requires high-dose medication or biologics. About 5-10% of asthma patients have severe disease that does not respond to standard therapy.

Eosinophilic Asthma

Driven by high levels of eosinophils (a type of white blood cell). Responds well to targeted biologic therapies like anti-IL5 agents.

Allergic Asthma

Triggered by allergens such as pollen, dust mites, or pet dander. May respond to anti-IgE therapy (Omalizumab).

Search Asthma Trials

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Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. Many trials recruit patients with stable, well-controlled asthma to test new prevention strategies, compare treatments, or study long-term outcomes. Your current control level does not exclude you.

Several biologics (Omalizumab, Mepolizumab, Benralizumab, Dupilumab) are available on the NHS for severe eosinophilic asthma. Clinical trials may offer access to newer biologics not yet approved.

Common tests include spirometry (lung function), FeNO (airway inflammation), blood tests for eosinophils and IgE, and sometimes sputum analysis or bronchoscopy depending on the study.

Most asthma trials run 12-52 weeks for treatment studies, with some prevention or long-term safety studies lasting 1-3 years. Phase 3 trials are typically 24-52 weeks.

How to Join a Asthma Clinical Trial

1

Search

Use our search above to find trials that match your condition and location. Review the eligibility criteria carefully.

2

Discuss

Talk to your GP or specialist about any trials you are interested in. They can help determine if a trial is appropriate for you.

3

Contact

Reach out to the trial team directly using the contact information on the ClinicalTrials.gov listing. They will guide you through screening.

4

Enrol

If you meet the criteria and decide to participate, you will go through informed consent and begin the trial process.

Related Comparisons

🗺️ Related Pathway: Respiratory Pathway