Sleep Disordered Breathing Clinical Trial
Official title:
Does Sleep Disordered Breathing in Pre School Age Children Cause Cognitive Weakness Reversible by Adenotonsillectomy? A Feasibility Study
Sleep disorder breathing (SDB) is a condition affecting 10% of children aged 2-6 years. It is
a combination of snoring most nights during sleep, patchy sleep, short periods of stopping
breathing (apnoea) and usually big tonsils. Most of these children get better with no
treatment by 8 years old. It has been suggested that having SDB mean that some children
concentrate and behave less well during the day and may learn more slowly than children who
don't snore. It has become common for many Ear, Nose and Throat (ENT) surgeons to take out
tonsils and adenoids (adenotonsillectomy) for this condition. Removing the tonsils and
adenoids (which are normally big at this age) means that most children quickly stop snoring
and seem to be cured. Unfortunately it is not clear if this operation makes any difference to
learning compared to just watching the child and letting them "grow out" of the condition
(watchful waiting).
There is no set treatment in the UK today. Children may be offered adenotonsillectomy or
watchful waiting; it is not know which, long term, is the right thing to do. Therefore the
investigators wish to do a study looking at these two different treatments to see if there is
a difference in children's learning over time between the two different treatments. The
investigators will look at children with SDB, measure their learning (and behaviour) and then
randomly select which children get one treatment or the other. They will then re-measure
learning (and behaviour) 7 months later to see if there is any difference between the two
groups. The investigators will also scientifically measure their sleep. This is possibly
quite a difficult study to do, the investigators are unsure whether families will agree to
take part and how easy it will be to measure learning with such young children (aged 2:6 -
5).
Purpose and Design. Large numbers of children snore on a regular basis in UK. It is known
that habitual snoring is associated with cognitive weakness but not known if it is the cause
of cognitive weakness. Teenagers who snored at a young age do less well at school than peers,
who did not snore at a young age, but it is not known if this is due to the snoring or
multiple other confounding factors.
More than 60% of children who snore regularly at 3 years of age have stopped regularly
snoring by 7 years of age. They grow out of SDB with no active treatment. If their tonsils
and adenoids are removed 80% will immediately stop snoring (and will be cured). Research
shows that if tonsils and adenoids are removed at 6-8 years old, there is no difference in
cognitive abilities between the group who had adenotonsillectomy and those that did not.
It is not known if several years of habitual snoring, sleep fragmentation and recurrent
short-lived episodes of hypoxia cause minor changes to the developing brain causing cognitive
weakness. Therefore it is not known if taking tonsils and adenoids out at a young age (2-4
years) when they first start snoring, thus avoiding several years of habitual snoring, sleep
fragmentation and recurrent mild hypoxia, makes a difference to cognition in the future. It
is not known if a period of a number of years of habitual snoring (with possible sleep
fragmentation and recurrent episodes of hypoxia) causes irreversible cognitive weakness,
reversible cognitive weakness or no cognitive weakness at all.
35,000 children undergo adenotonsillectomy in England and Wales per year with the second most
common indication being SDB (habitual snoring and other features of recurrent upper airway
obstruction).
The balance of benefits versus detrimental effects of adenotonsillectomy in children with SDB
is not accurately known. The detrimental effects are well known. They include significant
pain for at least 7 days for most children, bleeding after the operation in 1%, and very,
very rarely death. The benefits are less clear. Adenotonsillectomy in pre-school age children
with SDB results in improved behaviour and quality of life scores in the short term but it is
not known if there is an effect on cognition. The effect of adenotonsillectomy on cognitive
development versus the effect of watchful waiting with supportive care (treatment of
associated conditions such as chronic otitis media with effusion and rhinitis) needs
investigation, if clinicians are to give families a true description of advantages and
disadvantages of surgery for SDB.
The investigators therefore need to ask the question - Does adenotonsillectomy in preschool
age children alter future cognitive development? Answering this question will require a
large, multicentre randomised controlled study.
This study aims to assess the feasibility of carrying out this large randomised control
trial. It will try to answer the following questions:
1. Can the investigators effectively measure cognition in preschool age children?
2. Will parents be prepared to take part in such a study?
3. Can the investigators obtain useful sleep studies in these young children at home?
4. Will children stay in the study long enough to allow follow up?
5. Can the investigators define values allowing us to power a larger randomised control
trial?
6. Does the SRBD scale work as a pragmatic screening tool for SDB in a UK population?
Although numbers in this study will be small, the investigators may find a large
difference in outcomes between the two groups making a larger randomised control trial
unnecessary. Data from this study will therefore be analysed.
Recruitment:
All children between 2.6 years and 5 years, referred to two ENT surgeons in Middlesbrough by
General Practitioners in the Teesside geographical area with possible SDB will be considered
for recruitment into the trial. They will be offered entry into the trial if they meet
inclusion and exclusion criteria. The aim of these criteria is to have a study population of
children with the typical clinical features of SDB that would be actively considered by
informed ENT surgeons as possibly being offered adenotonsillectomy as a treatment in typical
UK practice.
Clear inclusion and exclusion criteria will be in place to delineate this population.
Randomisation:
Participants will be randomised to one of two treatments, either early removal of tonsils and
adenoids under general anaesthesia or watchful waiting, to allow the child to potentially
grow out of the condition without surgical intervention.
Consent:
Clear unambiguous information will be provided to the parents/guardians of prospective
participants at the time that they receive their outpatient appointment letter. This
information will be provided in the form of the patient information sheet.Treatment decisions
for SBD are made at the time of the ENT outpatient clinic. Therefore receiving this
information before the outpatient appointment allows the parent/guardian adequate time to
consider the study fully before they're asked whether or not they wish to participate. The
participants being recruited are children too young to provide consent or assent; it is
therefore important that the parents of the participants are well informed and have time to
consider the information fully. Parents/guardians will be offered the opportunity to ask any
questions that they may have at the time of the outpatient clinic and will also be made aware
that participation is voluntary and can be withdrawn at any time. The consent form will be
completed with the research psychologist to ensure that the parent/guardian is fully aware of
what the trial involves and is therefore making an informed choice. The research psychologist
has had training in mental capacity assessment and is competent in assessing and ensuring
comprehension and reasoned decision making. If eligible the participant will be offered entry
into the study and parents will provide informed consent at the time of their clinic
attendance. This will avoid delay in the assessment or treatment process and is in line with
the treatment format of the clinic.
Risks, burdens and benefits:
The investigators do not know what is the best course of treatment for young children with
SDB. There is a single study of preschool age children with SDB with a low follow up rate
(Biggs. PLoS One 2015). This study found no difference in cognitive development or behaviour
at 3 years post diagnosis irrespective of whether the child had undergone adenotonsillectomy
or not. These children had cognitive weakness compared to non-snoring controls, and this got
worse whether they received surgical treatment or were just observed. Current practice of
offering adenotonsillectomy may be subjecting children to a painful operation which offers
them no long term benefit. Set against this, adenotonsillectomy is known to immediately
improve quality of life in older children but it is not know if the difference seen at 7
months post randomisation is still present 2-3 years later if children have grown out of SDB.
This study therefore has equipoise.
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