Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Health Outcomes Following Treatment With Continuous Positive Airway Pressure or Noninvasive Ventilation in Patients With Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease and a Sleep Related Breathing Disorder
NCT number | NCT05623709 |
Other study ID # | Pro00118055 |
Secondary ID | |
Status | Terminated |
Phase | |
First received | |
Last updated | |
Start date | July 26, 2022 |
Est. completion date | March 22, 2024 |
Verified date | March 2024 |
Source | University of Alberta |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Observational |
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a chronic lung disease affecting an estimated 1 in 10 Canadians. Symptoms include persistent shortness of breath, cough and sputum production. The symptoms can be serious when people with COPD experience a flare of their disease and may lead to hospitalization or death. Improving other conditions that affect COPD control is one way to improve the health of people with COPD. Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is the most common breathing problem during sleep, and commonly co-exists with COPD. Although diagnosing and treating OSA is encouraged, it has not been highlighted in guidelines that recommend ideal COPD care. People with COPD and OSA have lower sleep quality and lower oxygen levels during sleep compared to people with OSA. Despite these differences, treatment of OSA in people with COPD is modeled after treatment of OSA in the general population, generally using treatment with continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) with the possible addition of oxygen through the CPAP machine. There are few studies looking at other types of treatment including noninvasive ventilation (NIV) in people with COPD and OSA. The majority of studies of NIV in COPD has been for people with other reasons to use NIV including acute respiratory failure or chronic hypercarbic respiratory failure and did not include people with risk factors for OSA or who had undergone overnight sleep studies. In Alberta, NIV is provided province wide for people who have both OSA who do not meet certain physiologic targets in their oxygen levels or breathing patterns after CPAP is applied on an overnight sleep study. NIV is provided preferentially to CPAP and oxygen, providing an opportunity to look at health outcomes when NIV is used instead of CPAP for the treatment of patients with COPD. Through this study, we will measure whether people with COPD and a sleep related breathing disorder such as OSA have fewer severe flares of COPD after starting CPAP or NIV. We will evaluate whether the number of Emergency Department visits, hospitalizations or deaths lowers after starting CPAP or NIV.
Status | Terminated |
Enrollment | 11 |
Est. completion date | March 22, 2024 |
Est. primary completion date | March 22, 2024 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | 40 Years and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Consenting adults who have completed polysomnography at the University of Alberta Sleep Disorders Laboratory in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. - Naïve to CPAP or NIV therapy or have use of CPAP or NIV <4 weeks in the past - Diagnosed with COPD by a respirologist and has fixed airflow obstruction on spirometry (i.e., post-bronchodilator FEV1/FVC <LLN on spirometry or FEV1/FVC <0.70 if the LLN is not provided) - Diagnosed with a SRBD for which CPAP or NIV are commonly prescribed, as defined below; some of the patients with mild SRBD or a SRBD suspected to be secondary to COPD rather than OSA (e.g. mild OSA, sustained hypercarbia, hypoxemia etc) may not be prescribed CPAP or NIV at the treating physician's discretion - OSA will be defined as a predominantly obstructive apnea-hypopnea index (AHI) =5 events/hr of sleep on sleep diagnostic testing in the presence of symptoms/relevant comorbidities or an AHI =15 events/hr irrespective of symptoms. If home sleep apnea testing was used in place of polysomnography, the respiratory event index (REI) will be a surrogate of AHI. - Hypoventilation will be defined by polysomnography criteria as a sustained elevation in the TcCO2 to be >55 mmHg for =10 min or a rise in TcCO2 by >10 mmHg to a value >50 mmHg for =10 min. If an arterial blood gas is available, sustained hypercapnia as defined by arterial carbon dioxide oxygen tension (PaCO2) >45 mmHg or serum bicarbonate (HCO3) =27 mmol/L while medically stable will be reported. Exclusion Criteria: - Significant lung disease in addition to COPD - Neuromuscular disease including diaphragmatic paralysis - Dementia - Treatment with CPAP or NIV for >4 weeks prior to study eligibility. - Refusal to participate - Inability to consent in English and do not have an interpreter readily available - Current diagnosis of an active malignancy - Central sleep apnea as the indication for PAP treatment. Central sleep apnea will be defined as a central hypopnea index =5 events/hr of sleep on polysomnography and the number of central apneas and/or central hypopneas is >50% of the AHI with or without Cheyne-Stokes breathing |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Canada | University of Alberta | Edmonton | Alberta |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University of Alberta |
Canada,
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* Note: There are 23 references in all — Click here to view all references
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Proportion of patients with moderate-severe exacerbations of COPD (Emergency Department visit for COPD) in the 2 years following initiation of CPAP or NIV compared to the 2 years prior | [stratified by intervention with CPAP or NIV] | 2 years | |
Secondary | Proportion of patients with severe exacerbation of COPD (hospitalization/intensive care unit admission for COPD) in the 2 years following initiation of CPAP or NIV compared to the 2 years prior | [stratified by intervention with CPAP or NIV] | 2 years | |
Secondary | Mean difference in the number of days hospitalized in the 2 years after the date of CPAP or NIV initiation or date of sleep diagnostic testing compared to the 2 years prior | [stratified by intervention with CPAP or NIV] [stratified by all-cause, stroke, cardiovascular, exacerbation of COPD or respiratory cause] Total number of days hospitalized [stratified by number of events/year] | 2 years | |
Secondary | Mean difference in hospitalizations/intensive care unit admissions for severe exacerbations of COPD in the 2 years after the date of CPAP or NIV initiation or date of sleep diagnostic testing compared to the 2 years prior | [stratified by intervention with CPAP or NIV] Number of events [stratified by number of events/year] Time to event | 2 years | |
Secondary | Mean difference in Emergency Department visits for moderate-severe exacerbations of COPD in the 2 years after the date of CPAP or NIV initiation or date of sleep diagnostic testing compared to the 2 years prior | [stratified by intervention with CPAP or NIV] Number of events [stratified by number of events/year] Time to event | 2 years | |
Secondary | Composite outcome of Emergency Department visits or hospitalizations following the date of NIV or CPAP initiation or date of sleep diagnostic testing | [stratified by all-cause, stroke, cardiovascular, exacerbation of COPD or respiratory cause] [stratified by intervention with CPAP or NIV] | 2 years | |
Secondary | Mortality following the start of NIV or CPAP or following the date of sleep diagnostic testing | [stratified by all-cause, stroke, cardiovascular, exacerbation of COPD or respiratory cause] [stratified by intervention with CPAP or NIV] | 2 years | |
Secondary | Mean and median hours of use of CPAP or NIV in hours/day | [Stratified by intervention with CPAP or NIV] | 2 years |
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