Combined Upper-airway and Breathing Control Therapies for Obstructive Sleep Apnea
Status: | Recruiting |
---|---|
Conditions: | Insomnia Sleep Studies, Pulmonary, Pulmonary |
Therapuetic Areas: | Psychiatry / Psychology, Pulmonary / Respiratory Diseases |
Healthy: | No |
Age Range: | 21 - 79 |
Updated: | 6/27/2018 |
Start Date: | September 6, 2017 |
End Date: | June 2019 |
Contact: | Scott A Sands, PhD |
Email: | sasands@bwh.harvard.edu |
Phone: | 6172780911 |
The current study combines two treatments for obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), oral appliances
and supplemental inspired oxygen. The following aims will be tested:
Aim 1. To determine whether supplemental inspired oxygen further reduces OSA severity
(apnea-hypopnea index) in patients using an oral appliance.
Aim 2. To determine whether baseline OSA phenotypes can predict the efficacy of oral
appliances versus supplemental oxygen versus both treatments in combination. We will test
whether responders to oral appliances have distinct pathophysiological characteristics
compared with oxygen responders.
and supplemental inspired oxygen. The following aims will be tested:
Aim 1. To determine whether supplemental inspired oxygen further reduces OSA severity
(apnea-hypopnea index) in patients using an oral appliance.
Aim 2. To determine whether baseline OSA phenotypes can predict the efficacy of oral
appliances versus supplemental oxygen versus both treatments in combination. We will test
whether responders to oral appliances have distinct pathophysiological characteristics
compared with oxygen responders.
Pre-specified primary analysis for Aim 1 is the change in AHI with combination treatment
versus oral appliance alone (%reduction versus placebo; including hypopnea events without
desaturation/arousals).
Aim 2 seeks to identify subgroups of patients that have the greatest reduction in AHI
(responders) with each treatment (post-hoc). We will use baseline physiological measures of
the four traits causing OSA (collapsibility, responsiveness, loop gain, arousal threshold) to
determine which characteristics predict responses to each intervention (leave-one-out support
vector machine modeling). Clinical measures of the same traits will be estimated from the
placebo night to confirm that responses can be predicted with clinically-available data. We
will also test whether responders to oral appliances have a greater response to oxygen than
oral appliance non-responders (and vice-versa), to address whether responders to both
treatments are similar or different.
versus oral appliance alone (%reduction versus placebo; including hypopnea events without
desaturation/arousals).
Aim 2 seeks to identify subgroups of patients that have the greatest reduction in AHI
(responders) with each treatment (post-hoc). We will use baseline physiological measures of
the four traits causing OSA (collapsibility, responsiveness, loop gain, arousal threshold) to
determine which characteristics predict responses to each intervention (leave-one-out support
vector machine modeling). Clinical measures of the same traits will be estimated from the
placebo night to confirm that responses can be predicted with clinically-available data. We
will also test whether responders to oral appliances have a greater response to oxygen than
oral appliance non-responders (and vice-versa), to address whether responders to both
treatments are similar or different.
Inclusion Criteria:
- Diagnosed OSA or suspected OSA based on snoring
Exclusion Criteria:
- Severe co-morbidities (cardiovascular, renal, lung disease, neurological), including:
Congestive heart failure, Neurological conditions that may affect sleep or breathing (e.g.
neuromuscular diseases e.g. myasthenia gravis; neurodegenerative diseases e.g.
Alzheimer's/Parkinson's)
- Medications that will substantially affect respiration, including opioids,
barbiturates, theophylline, doxapram, acetazolamide, pseudoephedrine
- Claustrophobia
- Insomnia and other non-respiratory sleep disorders
- Inability to sleep supine
- Contraindications to oral appliances, including insufficient teeth to support the
device, periodontal problems inducing tooth mobility, active temporomandibular joint
disorder
- Allergy to lidocaine or oxymetazoline HCl
We found this trial at
2
sites
75 Francis street
Boston, Massachusetts 02115
Boston, Massachusetts 02115
(617) 732-5500
Phone: 857-928-0341
Brigham and Women's Hosp Boston’s Brigham and Women’s Hospital (BWH) is an international leader in...
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Notting Hill, Victoria
Phone: 61 3 9905 0187
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