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COPD (chronic lung disease)

SPIROMICS Study of Early COPD Progression (SOURCE)

Recruiting · 14 sites across 12 states

Always free

Study care at no cost to you

For your time and travel

Many studies pay you back

Most need no insurance or papers

Legal status usually isn't required; we'll tell you each study's requirements

Interpreters available

Ask for your language

Your choice

Voluntary — you can stop anytime

What is this study?

This is an observational study of 1000 participants to further define the nature of early chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) in younger, at-risk individuals. The study has three main goals: * To use CT scan imaging to identify which smokers will develop COPD.

It is , overseen by an independent and licensed medical staff.

Read the full clinical description

This is an observational study of 1000 participants to further define the nature of early chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) in younger, at-risk individuals. The study has three main goals: * To use CT scan imaging to identify which smokers will develop COPD. * To identify biomarkers predictive of smokers that will develop COPD. * To determine if sputum (phlegm) can be analyzed to predict which smokers will develop COPD. Procedures (methods): All participants will undergo study related questionnaires assessing medical history, smoke exposure and use, medication use, social and behavioral health, pulmonary symptoms, food frequency, and will provide nasal swab, blood, stool, and urine samples, pulmonary function testing to determine function, sputum induction to provide a sputum sample for airway biospecimen analysis, and CT imaging of the lungs.

Who this study is looking for

In plain language, from the study's own rules. The study team confirms the full details with you — this isn't a final yes or no.

✅ You may be able to join if…

  • Adults ages 30-55 years
  • Either: (1) healthy controls with no smoking history (less than 100 cigarettes in lifetime, including vaping and cannabis), and normal breathing test results, or (2) people who have at least a 10 pack-year smoking history with breathing test results that fit COPD stages described in the study
  • Able to do study procedures like breathing tests and provide required samples (nasal swab, blood, stool, and urine) and CT imaging
  • If you are one of the 20 healthy controls recruited from certain centers, agreeing to the bronchoscopy sub-study is only required for that sub-study group

🚫 You may not be able to join if…

  • Severe asthma (as defined by the study’s asthma medication intensity and/or recent asthma healthcare use/hospitalization)
  • Currently pregnant or planning pregnancy during the study (to reduce fetal radiation exposure)
  • Cognitive dysfunction that makes it impossible to complete study procedures
  • BMI over 35.0 kg/m² at baseline
  • Other serious lung or breathing conditions besides COPD/asthma that are judged to be the main cause of symptoms (or certain other major medical issues listed by the study), including known HIV/AIDS

Are you a good fit?

Simplified highlights. The study team always confirms the full details with you.

  • Adults roughly 30–55
  • Have COPD (chronic lung disease)
  • !Some conditions may not be a fit: Obesity / overweight, Asthma
  • !Not for people who are pregnant or breastfeeding

What to expect, step by step

  1. 1

    Usually a few weeks

    The study team checks whether the study is a good fit for you, with a visit and sometimes lab tests. You can ask any questions before deciding.

  2. 2

    Treatment

    If you join and choose to continue, you receive the study treatment and are watched closely by medical staff.

  3. 3

    Follow-up

    After treatment, the team checks on your health and confirms the visit schedule with you. You can leave the study at any point.

Has this treatment been tested before?

The study team can share what safety testing has been done so far.

What you need to know before you apply

What is this study testing?+

This is an observational study of 1000 participants to further define the nature of early chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) in younger, at-risk individuals. The study has three main goals: * To use CT scan imaging to identify which smokers will develop COPD.

Is it safe? Who makes sure of that?+

This is a research study. Every study is reviewed and monitored by an independent ethics board (called an IRB) whose job is to protect participants, and care is overseen by licensed medical staff. You'll be told the known risks before you agree to anything, and you can stop at any time.

Will I get a placebo instead of the real treatment?+

Some studies compare a treatment against a placebo (an inactive version), and some don't. If this one does, the study team will explain your chances of receiving the active treatment before you decide. Nothing is hidden from you.

Do I have to stop taking my current medications?+

It depends on the study. Some let you stay on your current medications and some ask you to adjust them. Never stop a medication on your own — the study team will review everything with you first.

Does it cost anything? Will I be paid?+

Study-related care is provided at no cost to you. Some studies also pay for your time; the coordinator can tell you if this one does. You should never be asked to pay to take part.

Do I need insurance? Will anyone ask about my immigration status?+

No. You do not need health insurance to take part in a research study, and you will not be asked about your immigration status to join. Taking part is about whether you're a medical fit for the study.

What if English isn't my first language?+

You have the right to understand everything before you agree. Study sites can often provide materials or an interpreter in your language — you can ask the coordinator for one.

Is my information private?+

Yes. Your health information is only shared with the study sites you choose to be contacted by, and only to help match and enroll you. It is never sold, and you can ask us to delete it at any time.

Some requirements (like specific lab values or timing) are confirmed directly by the study team, not by us.

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · NCT05033990 · Locations: Alabama · Arizona · California · Colorado · Illinois · Iowa · Maryland · Michigan · New York · North Carolina · Pennsylvania · Utah