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Clinical Trial Summary

Adults with Down syndrome (DS) have a high prevalence of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), which may worsen cognitive performance.

In general population, continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP), the gold Standard treatment for OSA, partially reverses cognitive impairment secondary to OSA. CPAP treatment, however, is not regularly proposed in adults with DS and OSA. It is usually presumed both by caregivers and physicians, that DS patients will not tolerate or adapt to the treatment, and that they would not benefit much more from CPAP treatment. Therefore, data about the feasibility and impact of CPAP treatment on cognitive function in this population is lacking.

The main objective of this study is to investigate cognitive performance in adults with DS and OSA, the corresponding functional brain changes and their reversibility with CPAP treatment.


Clinical Trial Description

Population Participants will be included from the Catalan Down Syndrome Foundation (FCSD). After obtaining a written informed consent, approved by the ethical committee, a total of 60 adult subjects of both sexes with SD and without dementia will be included. Forty subjects with a diagnosis of severe OSA (AHI> 30) without significant comorbidities or excessive daytime sleepiness (Epworth <12) and 20 subjects without OSA.

Objectives:

The general objective is to evaluate cognitive and/or behavioural dysfunction in adults with Down syndrome that can improve with CPAP treatment.

- By evaluating sleep, cognitive function and behaviour aspects in adults with Down syndrome with and without OSA.

- By assessing the changes in sleep, in cognitive, behavioural function, and brain connectivity measures after 6 month of treatment in subjects with DS and severe OSA.

Secondary objectives:

- Assess the relationship between the severity of OSA (AHI, hypoxemia, sleep fragmentation) and severity in cognitive impairment.

- Identify possible sleep and anthropometric parameters that could suggest a worsening in cognitive function in subjects with DS and OSA.

Methodology:

Open pilot study with randomized therapeutic intervention of parallel groups and blind evaluation in neuropsychological assessment.

Patients with severe OSA will be randomized to i) conservative treatment (CT) or to ii) CPAP and conservative treatment.

Patients included in the study will be monitored and followed for 6 months. Patients with severe OSA will perform follow up visits to monitor the objective compliance and side effects of the treatment in the 1st, 3rd and 6th month.

At baseline and after 6 months of treatment, in the three groups of subjects (i) Subjects without OSA, ii) Subjects with OSA and CPAP treatment, and iii) Subjects with OSA+ TC treatment , it will be performed:

1. Sleep evaluation:

Subjective sleep quality (Pittsburgh sleep quality index) and daytime Somnolence (Epworth Sleepiness Scale) Nocturnal sleep by polysomnography (PSG) Sleep-wake pattern by actigraphy

2. Neurocognitive function with an extensive neuropsychological battery assessing mainly memory, attention and executive functions for DS population. (CAMCOG-DS, Cued Recall Test (CRT), different subtests of the Barcelona Test battery: orientation in person, time and space, language items (comprehension, reading and writing), verbal abstraction and oculomotor praxis, cats and dogs test, Attention cancellation test, verbal fluency test.

3. Measures of cerebral functional connectivity: through measures of consistency, mutual information, probability of synchronization and transfer entropy. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04198493
Study type Interventional
Source Fundació Institut de Recerca de l'Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau
Contact SANDRA GIMENEZ BADIA, MD, PhD
Phone +34935537855
Email sgimenez@santpau.cat
Status Not yet recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date December 2019
Completion date November 2021

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