Obstructive Sleep Apnea Clinical Trial
Official title:
Cost Effective Strategy to Evaluate Veterans With Sleep Apnea
This research study is comparing home and in-laboratory testing of veterans with suspected obstructive sleep apnea, a common breathing disorder during sleep. It is hoped that home testing will be equally effective in improving quality of life but have lower cost than in-lab testing. These findings will allow veterans to have greater access to diagnosis and treatment of their sleep apnea.
Objective: The overall goal of the project is to improve access to care for veterans with
suspected obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), a breathing disorder during sleep characterized by
repetitive closure of the pharyngeal airway. Portable monitors are commercially available to
diagnose participants with suspected OSA and establish the continuous positive airway
pressure (CPAP) setting needed for treatment. Their application to home testing is not
widely accepted because it is not known whether home testing, when compared to conventional
in-lab polysomnograms, is cost effective and produces similar outcomes with regard to
participant adherence to CPAP treatment and improvements in functional impairment. The
specific goals of the proposed research are to address these barriers by comparing the
functional impact, cost, and cost-effectiveness of evaluating veterans with suspected OSA
using home versus in-lab testing.
Research Design: In this prospective randomized control trial of equivalency, participants
referred to the Philadelphia and Pittsburgh VA Medical Centers for evaluation for OSA will
be randomized to either exclusively in-lab or home testing following baseline assessment.
Methodology: In-lab polysomnograms will be performed to diagnose OSA and titrate the
pressure setting for subsequent CPAP therapy. Self-administered home testing will consist of
an overnight unattended sleep study followed by a 1-week autoCPAP titration trial.
Objectively assessed CPAP adherence and its consequent effects on subjective and objective
daytime sleepiness, disease specific and general functional impairment, and participant
preference will be obtained at 1- and 3-months after starting CPAP treatment and 3-monthly
thereafter to the end of study follow-up. Medical service use and cost will be collected for
the entire observation period.
Aim 1 will determine if participants with suspected OSA who receive home testing have the
same adherence to subsequent CPAP treatment and the same functional outcomes as participants
receiving in-lab testing. Primary outcome measures will be 1) objectively measured adherence
to CPAP treatment and 2) the global score on the Functional Outcomes of Sleep Questionnaire
(FOSQ) to assess the consequent effects of adherence on disease specific functional
impairment. Secondary functional outcome measures will assess subjective (Epworth Sleepiness
Scale) and objective (Psychomotor Vigilance Test) daytime sleepiness, and general quality of
life (SF-12). Hypothesis 1: Despite differences between in-lab versus home testing in terms
of technology, time participants interact with health care professionals, and environment,
there is no clinically significant decline in mean CPAP adherence and no clinically
significant reduction in functional outcomes in participants receiving home versus in-lab
testing.
Aim 2 will compare the differences in cost and quality-adjusted life years saved (QALYS)
between home versus in-lab testing to estimate a cost-effectiveness ratio. Participant
preference will be assessed with the EuroQol (EQ-5D) and Health Utilities Index 2 (HUI).
Hypothesis 2a: Average total health-care delivery cost is lower for veterans receiving home
testing relative to those receiving in-lab testing. Hypothesis 2b: Because we believe that
at-home testing will have lower costs and equivalent outcomes, we will be 90% confident that
the cost per QALY ratio comparing at-home testing with in-lab testing will be less than
$100,000.
Clinical Relationship: We need to determine the most cost effective way to diagnose veterans
with OSA and initiate them on CPAP treatment. If the results show that home testing produces
clinical outcomes that are not significantly clinically inferior and similar or reduced
costs compared with in-lab testing, decision makers can be confident that home monitors can
be used to diagnose and treat OSA and that improving veterans' access to care for OSA need
not require construction of additional, costly sleep labs.
Findings: We anticipate that the results of Aim 1 will demonstrate that participants
receiving in-lab versus home testing have similar clinical outcomes. We further anticipate
that Aim 2 will demonstrate that home testing is more cost effective than in-lab testing. If
confirmed, these findings will lead to wide acceptance of home portable monitor testing and
increase veteran access to care.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Diagnostic
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