Plain-English translation of NCT06136091 on ClinicalTrials.gov ↗ · Source last updated · Translation generated · How we translate trials
Read our Asthma research guide →Researchers want to understand why asthma affects children differently—why some kids have mild symptoms while others struggle more, even when taking the same treatments. This one-year study will follow 250 children with asthma and 60 without asthma, ages 6–17, to track their symptoms and see what patterns emerge. By learning more about how asthma behaves in different kids, doctors hope to better predict and prevent asthma flare-ups in the future.
Even though we have good asthma treatments available, many children still have symptoms that get worse unexpectedly. Researchers don't fully understand why some kids respond better to treatment than others, or what triggers their worst flare-ups. This study aims to identify those patterns so future care can be more personalized and effective.
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If you have asthma, you'll visit the clinic every three months over one year—four visits total—to have your lung function checked and answer questions about your health. You'll also use your smartphone to report when you catch a cold or have asthma symptoms, and you may be asked to come in for up to three extra visits if you get sick. If you don't have asthma, you'll have just two in-person clinic visits (at 3 and 12 months) plus two phone calls (at 6 and 9 months).
AI-generated summary from trial data · Jun 2, 2026 · Not medical advice
United States