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In this email:

  1. Opportunities:
    • Celldex Clinical Trial for Chronic Inducible Urticaria
    • Asthma and COPD Patient and Carer Survey
    • ABPA Clinical Trial Recruitment
  2. GAAPP Publications
  3. From the Chief Scientific Officer Desk
 
 

 
 

Opportunities

 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 

 
 

GAAPP Publications

 
 

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Assessing asthma symptoms in children: qualitative research supporting the development of the Pediatric Asthma Diary—Child (PAD-C) and Pediatric Asthma Diary—Observer (PAD-O)

Pediatric asthma needs novel ft-for-purpose clinical outcome assessments (COAs) developed per the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA’s) regulatory guidance for evaluating clinical benefit in treatment trials. To address this gap, the Patient-Reported Outcome (PRO) Consortium’s Pediatric Asthma Working Group has continued the development of 2 COAs to assess asthma signs and symptoms in pediatric asthma clinical trials to support efficacy endpoints.

You can read the publication on this link

 
 

 
 
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GAAPP has co-authored more than 30 peer-reviewed publciations. Please visit our website to check those publications and also access the latest guidelines from GINA, GOLD, EADV, AAI, and EAACI.

 
 

 
 

From the Chief Scientific Officer Desk

 
 
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Announcing the formation of the Chronic Airways Assessment Test (CAAT) Governance Board

The Chronic Airways Assessment Test (CAAT) is an 8-item questionnaire, which is a modified version of the COPD Assessment Test (CAT) with an adaptation of an introductory sentence referring to “chronic airway disease” instead of COPD. It is a patient-completed questionnaire that can be delivered in paper format or digitally. It covers symptoms such as cough, phlegm, chest tightness and breathlessness, and disease impacts, including physical activity, confidence, sleep, and energy. In addition to being a tool for clinical trials in diseases beyond COPD for which the CAT was developed, the CAAT has the potential to be a tool used by patients living with multiple lung conditions and providers to have a conversation about their health status. The CAAT has been recently validated in asthma and COPD, but data from the CAT suggest it has potential in other indications, such as bronchiectasis.

 
 

We are pleased to announce that the CAT Governance Board was expanded to the CAAT Governance Board with a mission of making the CAAT available to a global audience of patients, families, and healthcare providers. The Global Allergy and Airways Patient Platform (GAAPP), a global umbrella nonprofit comprised of over 110 international allergy and airways patient advocacy organizations, is the operational lead for the Governance Board. The Governance Board will focus on CAAT integrity and development strategy while working with an international Scientific Committee chaired by a GAAPP member organization, the COPD Foundation, focused on validation, dissemination, translations, and implementation of the CAAT.

Read more at: https://gaapp.org/caat_cat/

 
 

 
 
 
 

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