OSA Clinical Trial
Official title:
Acetazolamide as a Means to Mitigate Falling Ventilatory Drive and Drive-dependent OSA
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is a highly prevalent disorder that has major consequences for cardiovascular health, neurocognitive function, risk of traffic accidents, daytime sleepiness, and quality of life. For years, a "classic" model of OSA has been used to describe the disorder, which fails to capture it's complexity. Recently, a model for OSA called drive-dependent OSA was discovered be more prevalent in the OSA population. This drive-dependent OSA is due to ventilation instability that occurs during respiratory events however these individuals have spontaneous increases in drive during respiratory events that stabilize their airway (i.e., via improving upper airway muscle activity) and reduce the risk of respiratory events in people with OSA. Therefore, by stabilizing the ventilatory drive, OSA should be treatable. Acetazolamide is a pharmacological ventilatory stimulant and has been previously shown to reduce OSA severity. As such in this study, the goal is to demonstrate acetazolamide improves OSA severity in 'drive-dependent' OSA people by improving drive-related pharyngeal obstructions compared to the 'classic' OSA people.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 36 |
Est. completion date | December 31, 2027 |
Est. primary completion date | December 1, 2027 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 21 Years to 80 Years |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Ages 21-80 years - Suspected OSA (snoring, sleepiness, witnessed apneas, other clinical symptoms) or diagnosed OSA (severity not required) - Untreated; No use of OSA treatments within 2 weeks of the baseline study. No plans to start OSA treatments for the duration of the study protocol Exclusion Criteria: - Any unstable medical condition - Current use of the study medication. - Use of ventilatory stimulant or depressant medications that may complicated interpretation of results (including opioids, barbiturates, doxapram, almitrine, theophylline, 4-hydroxybutanoic acid). - Contraindications for acetazolamide, including: - Allergies to sulfonamides - e.g. acetazolamide, hydrochlorothiazide, furosemide, sulfasalazine, celecoxib, sumatriptan, and zonisamide. - closed-angle glaucoma - adrenal insufficiency - known electrolyte or acid/base imbalance (hyponatremia, hypokalemia, hyperchloremia, metabolic acidosis, acidemia) - clinically-significant kidney disorders (eGFR<60 ml/min/1.73m2) - clinically-significant liver disorders - Use of more than 500 mg/day of Aspirin, due to the potential for an interaction of acetazolamide and very high doses of Aspirin (acetylsalicylic acid, a salicylate drug) - Adrenocortical insufficiency - Low sodium or potassium - hyperchloremic acidosis - Conditions likely to affect obstructive sleep apnea physiology: neuromuscular disease or other major neurological disorder, heart failure, or any other unstable major medical condition. - Respiratory disorders other than obstructive sleep apnea: - central sleep apnea (>75% of respiratory events scored as central) - chronic hypoventilation/hypoxemia (awake SaO2 < 92% by oximetry) due to chronic obstructive pulmonary disease or other respiratory conditions - Conditions likely to increase arousability from sleep: insomnia - Other sleep disorders that may complicate establishment of sleep: periodic limb movements (periodic limb movement arousal index > 10/hr), narcolepsy, or parasomnias - For intramuscular electrodes and catheter: allergy to lidocaine - Highly-sensitive gag reflex. Patients with a self-reported 'highly-sensitive gag reflex', including an affirmative response to 'Do you sometimes gag when brushing your teeth?', will not take part in the physiology studies given the placement of an esophageal catheter - For intramuscular electrodes: use of aspirin or other oral anti-platelets / anti-coagulants - For oronasal mask: severe claustrophobia - Pregnancy or nursing |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | Brigham and Women's Hospital | Boston | Massachusetts |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Brigham and Women's Hospital |
United States,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Percentage reduction of apnea-hypopnea Index (AHI) with active versus placebo therapy in drive-dependent vs classic OSA groups | The primary efficacy outcome measure is the apnea hypopnea index (3% desaturation or arousal), presented as a percent reduction from baseline. Differences in this measure with active versus placebo therapy will be assessed. The primary comparison will be the difference in this measure in drive-dependent versus classic OSA subgroups. | 1 night | |
Secondary | Hypoxic burden, %.min/hr | the respiratory event-associated area under the desaturation curve from pre-event baseline | 1 night | |
Secondary | Arousal index, events/hr | average number of arousals per hour of total sleep time | 1 night | |
Secondary | N1 sleep, %total sleep time | Percentage of stage 1 sleep as a proportion of total sleep time | 1 night |
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