Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Phase III Single-blind Randomized Controlled Trial of Bipap Versus CPAP in Overlap Syndrome
The purpose of this study is to determine if Bipap should assume a standard-of-care role in the management of overlap syndrome.
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a leading cause of disability and death
worldwide. Acute exacerbations of COPD (AECOPD), in particular, serve as marker of an
accelerated disease course and thus herald an increased risk of not only repetitive AECOPD
episodes but also deteriorating pulmonary function and death (2). Obstructive sleep apnea
(OSA), when it occurs in combination with COPD, is an increasingly recognized contributor to
AECOPD episodes. OSA consists of repetitive sleep-related partial loss of airway caliber
arising from increased transmural pressures which favor luminal collapse. OSA is estimated
to afflict 4 to 9% of the populations, a prevalence which is anticipated to climb
hand-in-hand with the rising incidence of obesity.
The combination of the two disorders, which has been arbitrarily labeled as Overlap Syndrome
(OS), has been linked with greater elevations in arterial carbon dioxide tensions and
pulmonary vascular resistance and lower arterial oxygen tensions than is seen with either of
its component disorders in isolation. Elevated pulmonary artery pressures may progress to
cause cor pulmonale, a process whereby compensatory right ventricle remodeling, hypertrophy,
and eventually, florid heart failure. In the setting of OSA, the therapeutic gold standard
is nightly continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP). Essentially, CPAP machines function
by administering a single continuous positive pressure airflow to the person's airway via an
appropriately fitted nasal mask. The applied pressure stents open partially occluded airway
segments during sleep. Though effective in OSA and OS, it is increasingly realized that for
OS patients there may exist a reduction not only in airway patency but also in ventilatory
drive when sleeping such that means to augment per breath volumes may attain incremental
benefits to the use of CPAP alone. Although CPAP is ineffective in COPD, Bipap has shown
benefit suggesting that patient with OSA and COPD may derive an improvement in
health-related outcomes by using a ventilation modality which addresses both of the
underlying conditions.
Bipap functions by combining the single flow in CPAP with a second inspiratory pressure
assist which not only overcomes sleep-related airway resistance but also increases the
magnitude of each breath resulting in lower diurnal carbon dioxide tensions and pulmonary
artery pressures. Bipap may harbor a mortality benefit in COPD; but the study results are
conflicting. It is unclear if Bipap is more effective at treating OSA than usual CPAP.
However, it is in the setting of OS that Bipap may assume a prominent role through its
ability to address both disorders; CPAP for the OSA portion and an inspiratory pressure
assist to ameliorate the COPD piece. Thus far no study has been conducted to address whether
OS may derive a particular benefit from Bipap or, more specifically, examine whether Bipap
may diminish the risk of AECOPD, or heart failure-related hospitalizations.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Investigator), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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