Stroke Clinical Trial
Official title:
SLEep APnea Screening Using Mobile Ambulatory Recorders After TIA/Stroke (SLEAP SMART): A Randomized Controlled Trial
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is common after stroke/TIA and, left untreated, is associated with recurrent vascular events, poor functional outcomes, and long-term mortality. Despite its high prevalence, OSA often remains underdiagnosed after stroke. The purpose of this study is to evaluate portable sleep monitors (PSMs) as a broad screening tool for OSA after stroke/TIA. The study investigators hypothesize that the screening with PSMs will lead to an increase in the diagnosis of treatable OSA after stroke/TIA and an improvement in sleep-related and functional outcomes.
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is common after stroke and, left untreated, is associated with
recurrent vascular events, poor functional outcomes, and long-term mortality. Despite its
high prevalence, OSA often remains underdiagnosed after stroke. While in-laboratory
polysomnography studies are the gold standard for diagnosing OSA, their use is limited by the
lack of availability, patient unwillingness to sleep overnight at a laboratory and high
costs. Home-based PSMs can accurately diagnose OSA and are much more accessible, convenient
and low-priced compared to in-laboratory sleep studies.
The primary purpose of this study is to determine whether broad screening for OSA using PSMs,
as compared to usual care, increases the proportion of patients diagnosed with treatable OSA
after stroke or TIA. Secondary aims include whether screening with PSMs increases the
proportion of patients treated for OSA with continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) and
whether functional outcomes and sleep-related outcomes are improved. Finally, the study will
also determine whether this approach is cost-effective.
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