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Clinical Trial Summary

Recent ground-breaking research has shown that clearance of toxic neuro-metabolites from the brain including the proteins β-Amyloid (Aβ) and tau that form dementia causing plaques and tangles is markedly impaired when sleep is disturbed. This suggests that dementia risk may be increased in people with sleep disorders such as obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). Longitudinal studies have linked OSA with a 70-85% increased risk for mild cognitive impairment and dementia. Despite this strong link, little is known about the OSA-specific mechanistic underpinnings. It is not fully understood as to how sleep disturbance in OSA inhibit brain glymphatic clearance. However, it is known that OSA inhibits slow wave sleep, profoundly activates sympathetic activity, and elevates blood pressure - particularly during sleep. These disturbances have, in turn, been shown to independently inhibit glymphatic function. Previous studies have attempted to sample human cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) involved in glymphatic clearance for dementia biomarkers during sleep. However, these studies were severely limited by the need for invasive CSF sampling. To address this problem, a set of newly available, highly sensitive blood based SIMOA assays will be used to study glymphatic function in people treated for severe OSA who undergo CPAP withdrawal. Furthermore, novel methods will be utilized to capture changes in slow wave sleep, blood pressure and brain blood flow together with sleep-wake changes in blood levels of excreted neuro-metabolites to define the pathophysiological mechanisms that inhibit brain cleaning in OSA.


Clinical Trial Description

Dementia is a neurodegenerative disease characterized by cognitive dysfunction affecting aspects of memory and learning. Although the mechanisms that underlie the pathophysiology of dementia are still unclear, in the past decade there has been a focus on the adverse impact of sleep disturbance on brain waste disposal via the glymphatic system. The glymphatic system is a recently discovered brain-wide perivascular passageway that transports toxic neuro-metabolites (e.g.: amyloid beta, or Aβ) out of the brain to the blood via the cerebrospinal fluid. Newer research has shown that the glymphatic system becomes particularly active during sleep, clearing metabolites twice as fast compared with wakefulness. Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), a sleep disorder characterized by periods of intermittent hypoxia and sleep fragmentation due to obstructed breathing, has traditionally been causatively linked to the development of hypertension and cognitive dysfunction. Further to this, recent epidemiological studies have also linked OSA to an increased risk for both dementia and its prodromal state - mild cognitive impairment. There is emerging evidence to suggest that OSA might chronically impair glymphatic clearance of Aβ42 from the brain and facilitate the formation of Aβ plaques that characterize Alzheimer's Disease. Recent ground-breaking research has shown that clearance of toxic neuro-metabolites from the brain including the proteins Aβ and tau that form dementia causing plaques and tangles is markedly impaired when sleep is disturbed. This suggests that dementia risk may be increased in people with sleep disorders such as OSA. Longitudinal studies have linked OSA with a 70-85% increased risk for mild cognitive impairment and dementia. Despite this strong link, little is known about the OSA-specific mechanistic underpinnings. It is not fully understood as to how sleep disturbance in OSA inhibit brain glymphatic clearance. However, it is known that OSA inhibits slow wave sleep, profoundly activates sympathetic activity, and elevates blood pressure - particularly during sleep. These disturbances have, in turn, been shown to independently inhibit glymphatic function. Previous studies have attempted to sample human cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) involved in glymphatic clearance for dementia biomarkers during sleep. However, these studies were severely limited by the need for invasive CSF sampling. To address this problem, this proposed study will use a set of newly available, highly sensitive blood based SIMOA assays to study glymphatic function in people treated for severe OSA who undergo CPAP withdrawal. Furthermore, novel methods will be utilized to capture changes in slow wave sleep, blood pressure and brain blood flow together with sleep-wake changes in blood levels of excreted neuro-metabolites to define the pathophysiological mechanisms that inhibit brain cleaning in OSA. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05606991
Study type Interventional
Source Woolcock Institute of Medical Research
Contact
Status Enrolling by invitation
Phase N/A
Start date July 18, 2023
Completion date December 2024

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