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Dive into the research topics where Sheryl Perry is active.

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Featured researches published by Sheryl Perry.


Respiratory Medicine | 2008

A dose-ranging study of indacaterol in obstructive airways disease, with a tiotropium comparison.

Stephen I. Rennard; Theo Bantje; Stefano Centanni; Pascal Chanez; Alexander Chuchalin; Anthony D. D’Urzo; Oliver Kornmann; Sheryl Perry; Damon Jack; Roger Owen; Mark Higgins

This dose-ranging study assessed the bronchodilator efficacy and tolerability of indacaterol, a novel once-daily inhaled beta2-agonist, in subjects clinically diagnosed with COPD. Comparative data with tiotropium were collected. In the double-blind, core period of the study, 635 subjects with COPD (prebronchodilator FEV(1)40% of predicted and > or =1.0L; FEV1/FVC <70%) were randomized to receive indacaterol 50, 100, 200 or 400microg or placebo via multi-dose dry powder inhaler, or indacaterol 400microg via single-dose dry powder inhaler, once daily for 7 days. After completing double-blind treatment and washout, a subset of subjects from each treatment group entered an open-label extension and received tiotropium 18microg once daily for 8 days. The primary efficacy variable was the trough bronchodilator effect: standardized area under the FEV1 curve between 22 and 24h post-dose (FEV1 AUC(22-24h)) on Day 1. Clinically relevant improvements versus placebo in FEV1 AUC(22-24h) were seen for 400 and 200microg doses on Day 1 and all doses on Day 7. All indacaterol doses significantly (P<0.05) increased FEV1 from 5min to 24h post-dose; the 400 and 200microg doses were most effective. All doses were well tolerated. Indacaterol trough FEV1 levels compared favorably with the improvement seen by Day 8 in subjects treated with tiotropium in the open-label extension. The results confirm that indacaterol has a 24-h duration of bronchodilator effect and a fast onset of action in COPD and suggest that indacaterol could be an effective once-daily inhaled beta2-agonist bronchodilator. Indacaterol demonstrated a good overall safety and tolerability profile.


principles and practice of constraint programming | 2014

Effect of dual bronchodilation with QVA149 on cardiac safety in healthy volunteers.

Anton Drollmann; Matthew Brown; Romain Sechaud; Sheryl Perry; Hisanori Hara; Ieuan Jones; Salvatore Febbraro

OBJECTIVES QVA149 is a dual bronchodilator, containing a fixed-dose combination of the long-acting β2-agonist indacaterol and long-acting muscarinic antagonist glycopyrronium, for the treatment of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Here we assess the potential of QVA149 (440/200 μg) at 4-fold the therapeutic dose for causing cardiac pharmacodynamic (PD) effects. METHODS This double-blind, randomized study estimated the time-matched largest heart rate (HR) change and average HR change (over 24 hours) from baseline for QVA149 vs. placebo in healthy subjects. Similar analyses were done for QVA149 vs. indacaterol 600 μg, glycopyrronium 200 μg, and salmeterol 200 μg. The time-matched and average change from baseline in QT interval corrected for HR using Fridericias formula (QTcF), effects on serum potassium and blood glucose, pharmacokinetic (PK) parameters, and safety were also assessed. RESULTS Of 50 subjects randomized, 43 completed the study. QVA149, when compared with placebo, showed the time-matched largest mean increase and decrease in HR of 5.69 bpm and -2.51 bpm, respectively, and average HR change from baseline of 0.62 bpm. QVA149 showed no tachycardic potential compared with indacaterol and no relevant tachycardic effect compared with glycopyrronium. No consistent differences were seen in the time-matched largest mean change and average change from baseline in QTcF for QVA149 vs. other treatments. There were no relevant effects of QVA149 on serum potassium and blood glucose. There was no apparent PK/PD relationship between the observed exposures to indacaterol and glycopyrronium in QVA149 on HR and QTcF. There were no deaths or serious adverse events. CONCLUSION Overall, short-term administration of QVA149 showed a good cardiovascular safety and tolerability profile in healthy subjects.


american thoracic society international conference | 2010

Pharmacokinetics Of Indacaterol After Single And Multiple Inhaled Doses

Sheryl Perry; Ralph Woessner; Guenther Kaiser; Joelle Campestrini; Franck Picard; Sanjeev Khindri; Simon Jennings


European Respiratory Journal | 2012

Efficient deposition and sustained lung concentrations of NVA237 after inhalation via the Breezhaler® device in man

Romain Sechaud; Manish Sudershan; Sheryl Perry; Hisanori Hara; Anton Drollmann; Rajesh Karan; Lilla Di Scala; Shibadas Biswal; Beverley Patterson; Guenther Kaiser


European Respiratory Journal | 2014

Efficacy and safety of 10 day treatment with the CRTh2 antagonist QAV680 evaluated in patients with allergic rhinitis in an environmental exposure chamber

Veit J. Erpenbeck; Ann Marie Salapatek; Piyush Patel; Johanne Sanni; Gerald Dubois; Ping Zhou; Sheryl Perry; Michael Larbig


European Respiratory Journal | 2014

QAV680, cetirizine and their combination reduce nasal symptoms in patients with intermittent allergic rhinitis in an environmental exposure chamber

Veit J. Erpenbeck; Anne Marie Salapatek; Piyush Patel; Deanne Carew; Gerald Dubois; Sheryl Perry; Michael Larbig


European Respiratory Journal | 2014

Safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics of an oral competitive reversible CRTh2 antagonist, QAW039, in healthy subjects

Veit J. Erpenbeck; Eva Vets; Lien Gheyle; Wande Osuntokun; Michael Larbig; Srikanth Neelakantham; Gerald Dubois; Sheryl Perry


European Respiratory Journal | 2014

Safety, tolerability and pharmacokinetics of QAV680, an oral CRTh2 antagonist, in healthy subjects

Veit J. Erpenbeck; Rainard Fuhr; Gerald Dubois; Sheryl Perry


Pneumologie | 2013

Effiziente Deposition und anhaltende Lungenkonzentration nach Inhalation von NVA237 via Breezhaler® beim Menschen

C de Mey; Romain Sechaud; M Sudershan; Sheryl Perry; Hisanori Hara; Anton Drollmann; Rajesh Karan; L Di Scala; Shibadas Biswal; B Pattersson; G Kasie


European Respiratory Journal | 2011

No significant clinical drug-drug interaction potential with indacaterol

Sheryl Perry; Paul Goldsmith; Sivakumar Vaidyanathan; Prafulla Bhad; Heidi J. Einolf; Ralph Woessner; Guenther Kaiser; Simon Jennings; Beverley Patterson

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