Sleep Apnea, Obstructive Clinical Trial
Official title:
The CPAP Effect in Severe Obstructive- Sleep- Apnea Patients Without Daytime Sleepiness: A Control Randomized Trial
Specific Aim:
1. To prove our hypothesis that in severe OSA patients without daytime sleepiness, CPAP
worked as effectively as in severe OSA patients with daytime sleepiness.
Using sham CPAP as the optimal placebo, we conduct a randomized double-blind placebo
controlled trial to assess the CPAP effect in severe OSA patients without daytime
sleepiness.
2. To establish a model to predict the CPAP effect We use the parameters of five aspects,
including changes of polysomnographic parameters, improvement of sleepiness, fatigue
and QOL, sympathetic activity, inflammatory mediators and metabolism, to establish a
model to predict CPAP effect.
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is a common disease, which affects 4% middle-aged men and 2%
women. Daytime sleepiness is one of the symptoms of OSA which drive patients to seek medical
help. Sleepiness in OSA has been reported to be raised by microarousal, altered sleep
structure and somnogenic cytokine and modifications in body metabolism. The assessments of
daytime sleepiness included objective measures, like multiple sleep latency test and
subjective measures, like Epworth sleepiness scale (ESS).
So far, continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) is the standard treatment for patients
with severe OSA. CPAP could improve daytime wakefulness, blood pressure and quality of life
(QOL). Several studies tried to identify factors predicting the CPAP effect and most
concluded CPAP was not effective for patients with high apnea-hypopnea index but not sleepy.
All of them determine the CPAP effect in terms of daytime function, lowering of blood
pressure and QOL. None of these studies evaluate the CPAP effects in terms of improvement of
sympathetic hyperactivity, inflammatory mediators and metabolic abnormalities. Therefore, we
assumed patients whose daytime functions didn't improve after CPAP treatment still possibly
got benefit from altering factors contributing to cardiovascular consequences.
Our previous study showed that CPAP effect in OSA patients without sleepiness was as well as
in patients with sleepiness, except that plasma level of norepinephrine and 24hr mean
arterial blood pressure could be lowered more in patients with sleepiness. However, without
optimal placebo and randomization, the actual role of CPAP in treating non-sleepy OSA
patients still couldn't be determined.
Recently sham CPAP was developed, which mimicked all the characteristics of a true CPAP
except for the null pressure applied to the upper airway of the patient. Moreover, sham CPAP
doesn't influence sleep efficiency, arousals, or apnea-hypopnea index. Therefore, in this
project, using sham CPAP as a placebo, we propose a randomized double-blind placebo
controlled trial to assess the effectiveness of CPAP in severe OSA patients without daytime
sleepiness. We also establish a model to predict the CPAP effect. The results would change
the current practice of managing severe OSA patients without daytime sleepiness.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Crossover Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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