Obstructive Sleep Apnea Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Randomized Controlled Study to Examine the Effect of Lifestyle Modification Program in Obstructive Sleep Apnea Patients
Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS) is a common form of sleep-disordered breathing (SDB) characterized by repetitive episodes of cessation of breathing during sleep due to upper airway collapse. It causes sleep fragmentation, disabling daytime sleepiness, impaired cognitive function and poor quality of life. In addition, OSAS is associated with non-fatal and fatal cardiovascular consequences including sudden death, in addition to an increased risk of road traffic accidents. Continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) is considered as the first-line treatment for OSA. Oral appliance has been shown to reduce the severity of sleep disordered breathing and leads to symptomatic improvement especially in mild to moderate OSA. The compliance with CPAP is low particularly in mild or moderate OSA patients and it is not a curative treatment of OSA. It has to be used in every night on a regular basis. Weight reduction has always been advocated in patients with OSA who are overweight and may lead to improvement in the severity of OSA. The existing studies about weight loss are limited by small sample size, short duration (<6 months), focus on very low calorie diet program or surgically induced weight loss program only. However, none of them have applied lifestyle modification program (LMP) which emphasizes on long term lifestyle and behavior change. Therefore, the investigators plan to conduct a randomized controlled trial among Chinese OSA patients by comparing the efficacy of LMP against usual clinical lifestyle advice alone on the improvement of OSA symptoms.
Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS) is a common form of sleep-disordered breathing (SDB)
characterized by repetitive episodes of cessation of breathing during sleep due to upper
airway collapse. It causes sleep fragmentation, disabling daytime sleepiness, impaired
cognitive function and poor quality of life. In addition, OSAS is associated with non-fatal
and fatal cardiovascular consequences including sudden death, in addition to an increased
risk of road traffic accidents.
OSAS is equally common among the middle-aged male Caucasian and Hong Kong (HK) Chinese
populations with prevalence rates of at least 4%. The prevalence and severity of OSAS tend
to increase through adult life, peaking in the late fifties to mid sixties, after which it
fails to increase or decrease. Another group of investigators reported high prevalence rates
of SDB in a group aged 65-95 years of 70% for men and 56% for women, at least double those
reported for middle-aged cohorts.
Risk factors for OSA include obesity, increasing age, being male, abnormal craniofacial
morphology, nasal obstruction, genetic factors. OSA is associated with several
cardiovascular consequences and social consequences e.g. motor vehicle accidents, impaired
cognitive performance, depression. Various epidemiologic studies have shown an association
between OSA and hypertension. In cross-sectional study, OSA was associated with increased
prevalence of self-reported heart failure and stroke. OSA has been shown to be independently
associated with coronary artery disease after adjustment for traditionally considered risk
factors.
Continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) is considered as the first-line treatment for
OSA. Oral appliance has been shown to reduce the severity of sleep disordered breathing and
leads to symptomatic improvement especially in mild to moderate OSA. The compliance with
CPAP is low particularly in mild or moderate OSA patients and it is not a curative treatment
of OSA. It has to be used in every night on a regular basis. Weight reduction has always
been advocated in patients with OSA who are overweight and may lead to improvement in the
severity of OSA. A population-based longitudinal study showed that a 10% weight loss
predicted a 26% decrease in apnoea-hypopnoea index (AHI), a count of the number of upper
airway obstructions per hour of sleep.
The existing studies about weight loss are limited by small sample size, short duration (<6
months), focus on very low calorie diet program or surgically induced weight loss program
only. However, none of them have applied lifestyle modification program (LMP) which
emphasizes on long term lifestyle and behavior change. Therefore, the investigators plan to
conduct a randomized controlled trial among Chinese OSA patients by comparing the efficacy
of LMP against usual clinical lifestyle advice alone on the improvement of OSA symptoms.
Aim of the study:
The investigators aim to test the hypothesis that LMP is superior to lifestyle advice alone
in the management of Chinese patients with OSA. The primary outcome measure is the change of
AHI. The secondary outcome measures are changes in quality of life, symptoms related to OSA,
glucose, and insulin metabolism parameters.
Hypothesis:
The investigators hypothesize that more OSA patients in a low glycemic index dietary
intervention program than patients receiving simple lifestyle advice alone will have
reduction in AHI.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Investigator), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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