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Clinical Trial Summary

Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is a prevalent condition that affects 7 to 12% of the US population and is characterized by repetitive collapse of the upper airway during sleep. Continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) has been shown to be highly effective in the treatment of OSA, however, adherence is poor with up to 54% of patients being non-adherent to CPAP therapy by Medicare criteria, which has been attributed to inadequate patient education and support for CPAP therapy.

Poor treatment adherence in patients with OSA can lead to adverse health consequences, poor quality of life, and patient dissatisfaction. Poor treatment adherence may be due to lack of sufficient patient education, time delays in delivery of care, lack of adequate healthcare coordination, or difficulty accessing various healthcare providers across a front desk which serves as a "healthcare bottle-neck". Better efficiency in healthcare delivery, with greater connectivity through knowledgeable and trained peer volunteers and cheap cell-phones integrated by a smart telephone exchange may alleviate some of the care and communication burden faced by the healthcare system. Specifically, such community health education volunteers ("peer-buddies") who are experienced in managing their OSA may be able to impart knowledge and confidence to a recently diagnosed patient in a much more personalized manner than that of a group therapy session.


Clinical Trial Description

OSA affects 7 to 12% of the US population and is an independent risk factor for several clinical consequences such as systemic hypertension, cardiovascular disease, stroke, reduced HR-QOL, increased all-cause mortality, and motor vehicle accidents due to sleepiness. However, OSA and other sleep disorders are woefully underdiagnosed because of time constraints at the PCP's office. Such poor CPAP adherence is associated with increased risk for fatal and non-fatal cardiovascular events. CPAP therapy has been associated with up to 3-fold reduction in fatal and non-fatal cardiovascular events in both on-treatment analysis of RCTs and observational studies. CPAP therapy is associated with 7-fold reduction in sleepiness-related accidents. The overarching aim of this proposal is to institute a multi-level strategy aimed at improving guideline based care for OSA in populations with health disparities.

The overarching aim of the program of research is to eventually institute a multi-level strategy with interventions aimed at both providers and patients in order to improve guideline based care for OSA in populations with health disparities. Specifically, in order to address the under-diagnosis of OSA, an electronic health record (EHR) based predictive analytics system will be implemented. A similar EHR-based alert system with reflex order sets for initiating testing for OSA that the investigators have developed will enable PCPs to effectively diagnose and treat OSA. It was found that in a nationally representative dataset of ~220,000 patients, lower neighborhood income was associated with lower CPAP adherence. Considering the time and access-related barriers in the PCP office, it is believed that such socioeconomic status (SES) related differences in CPAP adherence needs to be addressed by culturally-competent peer educators (such as promotors) with OSA serving as "peer-buddies". In a recent multi-site RCT, it was found that CPAP adherence and patient satisfaction was improved by peer-driven intervention through an interactive voice response system (PDI-IVR; PCORI-IHS-1306-02505), whereby the peers shared their experiences with CPAP naïve patients and educated them about OSA and risks of CPAP nonadherence. Whether PDI-IVR can improve adherence in underserved population in low resource clinics is unclear. In this proposal, 110 CPAP naïve patients and 35 experienced peer-buddies will be recruited in from a large healthcare system that provides care for an underserved population with an excess burden of sleep disorders (Medicaid and dual-eligible Medicare beneficiaries). This study will address health disparities in the diagnosis and treatment of OSA using a patient-level educational intervention (PDI-IVR system) targeting patients and thereby promote health equity. This proposal will also inform future studies by gathering additional data on the effect of PDI-IVR on adherence to sleep study testing and CPAP adherence in an underserved population in low resource clinics.

Specific Aim #1: To test a peer-driven intervention with interactive voice response (PDI-IVR) system to improve adherence to sleep study testing in a lower socioeconomic population.

Hypothesis #1: A PDI-IVR support system will lead to greater adherence to sleep study testing in patients with OSA when compared to patients receiving conventional education.

Specific Aim #2: To test a peer-driven intervention with interactive voice response (PDI-IVR) system to improve CPAP treatment adherence in a lower socioeconomic population.

Hypothesis #2: A PDI-IVR support system will lead to greater adherence to CPAP therapy in patients with OSA when compared to patients receiving conventional education. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03345524
Study type Interventional
Source University of Arizona
Contact Sairam Parthasarathy, MD
Phone 520-626-6109
Email sparthasarathy@deptofmed.arizona.edu
Status Not yet recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date November 17, 2017
Completion date October 11, 2018

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