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Clinical Trial Summary

At least 5% of patients with vasovagal syncope also have Sleep Syncope. Patients awake from sleep with profound malaise and gastrointestinal vagal symptoms. About 75% have severe nausea and about 40% have lower abdominal cramps. Some faint while supine, but most find their symptoms so severe that they rise quickly and hurry to the bathroom. Sometime either on the way to the toilet, near it, or shortly afterwards they faint. The nausea is followed by vomiting, and the cramps by watery diarrhea. After relief the patients remain presyncopal, diaphoretic, and tired. Almost all patients also have clinical vasovagal syncope during daytime hours. The cause of this is unknown. Orthostatic stress cannot be a factor in triggering the event, and in isolated case reports it occurs during non-REM sleep. There is no classic provocative situation of pain, the sight of trauma, or the presence of medical settings. These suggest the importance of central processes and the reduced likelihood that strategies that target maintaining preload (such as with midodrine and fludrocortisone) would be helpful. As well, midodrine is avoided during the night. Recently the investigators reasoned that if the investigators could rapidly suppress the nausea patients could remain supine, wait out the nausea, and not faint with orthostatic stress. Ondansetron is a potent anti-nausea medication that has rapidly dissolving preparations. Nine patients were instructed to keep one at the bedside, insert it upon waking up with nausea, remain in bed, and raise their legs (if possible). There was partial success with ondansetron 4 mg and complete success with ondansetron 8 mg. This remarkable but anecdotal observation requires formal testing. Research Objectives: the investigators will test the hypothesis that ondansetron 8 mg prn sublingually on awakening with moderate to severe nausea prevents loss of consciousness in patients with prior Sleep Syncope who awaken with malaise and nausea. Study Design & Methodology: The main study will be a placebo-controlled, double-blind, randomized, crossover clinical trial. The primary outcome will be the progression of awakening with nausea to syncope. Thirty patients with Sleep Syncope will be randomized 1:1 to receive packages of either ondansetron 8 mg sublingual tablets or matching placebo. They will each receive 3 boxes of 10 tabs, with refills available if needed. Each crossover period will last 6 months. In a substudy the investigators will test whether the predominant disturbed physiology is bradycardia, decreased venous return, or decreased systemic vascular resistance. This will be assessed using a unique, small, wearable blood pressure sensor that can be rapidly donned on the ear. It records heart rate and beat-to-beat waveforms, which permit estimating stroke volume, systemic vascular resistance, and cardiac output. the investigators will record these variables in all patients continuously from when the device is put on until 30 minutes afterwards. the investigators hypothesize that unlike during syncope provoked by head-up tilt testing, here there will be no decrease in preload until patients arise, and that the main physiologic disturbance during syncope is hypotension due to decreased preload superimposed on heart rate collapse. Anticipated Outcomes: If successful, this research would be i) the first to report a well-tolerated and highly effective treatment for most sleep syncope, and ii) the first to report the physiology of brain-initiated vasovagal syncope in the community outside a laboratory environment.


Clinical Trial Description

Trial interventions: Randomization will be to ondansetron 8 mg sublingual tablets or matching placebo tablets kept at the bedside, to be used upon awakening with premonitory nausea. This is a commonly used dose for rapid treatment of nausea. Randomization: Patients will be randomized into two treatment groups will be carried out centrally with a randomization scheme using a computerized algorithm. Medication containers will be filled and labelled with the randomization code number centrally. The investigators will complete a screening log of eligible but nonrandomized patients that will contain demographic data and the reason for non-randomization. Followup: Study nurse coordinators will see the patients in clinic at baseline, 3 months, 6 months, 9 months, and 12 months. The 6-month visit will be the visit during which the patients will be crossed over from one arm to the other. The total study duration will be 52 weeks for each participant. Patients will be asked to notify the study nurse if they experience a premonitory nausea awakening either with or without an ensuing syncope. Pill counts will be conducted to confirm the number of events. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05657925
Study type Interventional
Source University of Calgary
Contact
Status Not yet recruiting
Phase Phase 3
Start date December 1, 2024
Completion date December 31, 2027