The study focuses on asthma in children and teenagers aged 12 to under 18 years. It compares a new inhaled medicine called QVM149, which contains three active ingredients (mometasone furoate, glycopyrronium bromide, and indacaterol acetate), with an established inhaler that combines salmeterol/fluticasone. The purpose is to determine whether the new combination provides better improvement in lung function after 12 weeks of treatment.
Participants will receive one of the two treatments for a 12‑week period and then switch to the other treatment for another 12‑week period. The design is double‑blind, meaning neither the participants nor the study staff know which inhaler is active, and a double‑dummy approach ensures each person uses two inhalers (one containing the active drug and one containing a placebo) so the experience is the same. During the study, lung function is measured with a test called FEV1, which assesses how much air can be exhaled in one second, and participants complete a short questionnaire about asthma control called ACQ‑5 and another questionnaire about quality of life called PAQLQ. Safety is monitored by recording any side effects and by checking basic blood tests and other routine examinations.



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