Obstructive Sleep Apnea of Adult Clinical Trial
Official title:
SleepWell24: An Innovative Smartphone Application to Improve PAP Adherence
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is a major public health concern n the United States. Positive airway pressure (PAP) therapy is the treatment-of-choice and "gold standard" for individuals with moderate-to-severe OSA. Regular and sustained PAP use can reduce risk for subsequent disease and improve quality of life. Nevertheless, PAP adherence rates are low. Most PAP adherence programs do not address the self-management skills and strategies that promote adherence and are often too costly and complex to integrate into overburdened clinical environments. Furthermore, they do not leverage opportunities to change lifestyle behaviors that occur across the 24h spectrum (i.e., sleep hygiene, sedentary behavior, physical activity), which have promise to improve OSA symptoms and PAP adherence. The investigators have previously developed and successfully tested BeWell24, a multicomponent smartphone "app" that uses evidence-based behavior change strategies to improve sleep, sedentary, and physical activity behaviors. The investigators will enhance this app to create SleepWell24. Enhancements will include: (1) specific behavior change strategies from the evidence-based Sleep Apnea Self-Management Program to promote PAP adherence; (2) an interface for exchange of patient data to facilitate patient-provider communication on treatment progress; and (3) real-time feedback via wireless integration with a consumer-based PAP machine and wearable sensor. All aspects of this work will be embedded within the Mayo Clinic Arizona Center for Sleep Medicine. The investigators will test the effects of SleepWell24 in newly prescribed PAP users and gather data on the feasibility and acceptability of using SleepWell24 compared to a usual care control group. The investigators will conduct a pilot randomized controlled trial with participants randomly assigned to (1) SleepWell24; or (2) usual care for 60 days post-PAP prescription. The investigators will track recruitment/retention rates, app usage statistics, and measures of treatment satisfaction. The investigators will objectively measure PAP adherence to test whether the SleepWell24 group will have more hours/night of PAP usage compared to the usual care group. In an exploratory fashion, the investigators will also examine the effect of SleepWell24 on selected treatment outcomes (weight, daytime sleepiness, cognitive impairment, and health-related quality of life) and evaluate social cognitive and lifestyle behavior mediators of SleepWell24 on PAP adherence.
This exploratory study will test the feasibility and initial efficacy of a mobile health
smartphone intervention to increase adherence to positive airway pressure (PAP) therapy in
newly diagnosed obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) patients treated at the Mayo Clinic Arizona
Center for Sleep Medicine and associated outpatient clinics. This app, called SleepWell24,
will include PAP adherence behavior change strategies (drawn from the evidence-based Sleep
Apnea Self-Management Program), cloud-based linkages to a consumer-based PAP machine and
wearable sensor that provides nightly feedback on PAP adherence and sleep and activity
metrics, and a component to enhance patient-provider communication. The investigators will
embed SleepWell24 within usual patient care at the Mayo Clinic Arizona Center for Sleep
Medicine and associated outpatient clinics for app design/development, patient recruitment,
and treatment feasibility/satisfaction. This design will ensure the best opportunity for
clinical adoption. The primary aims are:
Aim 1: Determine the feasibility and acceptability of SleepWell24 from patient and provider
perspectives.
Aim 2: Determine the extent to which SleepWell24 improves PAP adherence over the first 60
days of use relative to usual care.
As an exploratory aim the investigators will explore the effect of SleepWell24 on treatment
outcomes (weight, daytime sleepiness, cognitive performance, health-related quality of life)
and putative social cognitive and behavioral mediators of PAP adherence (e.g., self-efficacy,
sleep quality, sedentary behavior, physical activity).
The investigators will test the feasibility, acceptability, initial efficacy and outcomes of
SleepWell24 compared to usual care during the first 60 days of PAP use among 94 patients
newly diagnosed with obstructive sleep apnea.
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