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Continuous Positive Airway Pressure Treatment of Obstructive Sleep Apnea to Prevent Cardiovascular Disease (SAVE)

A

Adelaide Institute for Sleep Health

Status and phase

Unknown
Phase 3

Conditions

Sleep Apnea
Cardiovascular Disease

Treatments

Device: Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP)
Other: Standard care

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
Industry

Identifiers

NCT00738179
ANZCTR 12608000409370
SAVE001

Details and patient eligibility

About

Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA) is a condition in which a person stops breathing for several seconds at a time due to relaxation of the throat muscles. This can occur many times during sleep. It is known to cause sleepiness and poor concentration during the day. Research indicates that OSA may be a modifiable risk factor for cardiovascular disease due to its association with hypertension, stroke, heart attack and sudden death. The standard therapy for symptomatic OSA is continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP). CPAP has been shown to effectively reduce snoring, obstructive episodes and daytime sleepiness and to modestly reduce blood pressure and other risk factors for cardiovascular disease. The overall aim of SAVE is to determine if CPAP can reduce the risk of heart attack, stroke or heart failure for people with OSA.

Full description

There is increasing evidence to indicate that OSA is an important modifiable risk factor for CV disease including stroke, MI, and heart failure. Increased nocturnal arterial blood pressure (BP), hypercoagulability, oxidative stress, inflammation, insulin resistance and cardiac arrhythmias are all associated with OSA. These effects are presumed to accelerate the progression of atheromatous disease, particularly within the coronary or cerebral vasculature. Moreover, OSA also appears to increase the risk of sudden death during sleep, which is different from the circadian pattern of sudden death in those without OSA, suggesting that episodes of apnea may have a direct triggering effect for cardiac arrhythmias or MI.

CPAP is now standard therapy for symptomatic OSA, with adherence to treatment comparable to that of other therapies for common chronic diseases. CPAP can eliminate apneas and improve daytime sleepiness, mood and quality of life. Furthermore, short term (1-3 months) randomised controlled trials of CPAP have shown modest reductions in blood pressure (BP) and other markers of CV disease, including C-reactive protein (CRP) and coagulation. However, the epidemiological data is complicated by potential residual confounding factors and the randomised evidence is limited. Thus, a direct causal link between OSA and CV disease remains inconclusive. The management of OSA, therefore, remains principally directed towards symptom control rather than CV risk modification.

The present trial aims to test whether long-term use of CPAP can reduce the incidence of CV events. If the trial shows that CPAP treatment of OSA reduces the incidence of CV events it will influence clinical practice toward the early detection and management of OSA, and add CPAP to the range of strategies available for the prevention of CV disease.

Enrollment

2,500 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

45 to 75 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Males and females, any race, and aged between 45 and 75 years

  2. Evidence of established coronary or cerebrovascular disease as evident by:

    • Coronary artery disease

      • Previous MI (equal to or greater than 90 days prior to ApneaLinkTM assessment)
      • Stable angina or unstable angina (Clinical event equal to or greater than 30 days and confirmatory test equal to or greater than 7 days prior to ApneaLinkTM assessment) defined as either ≥70% diameter stenosis of at least one major epicardial artery segment, or ≥50% diameter stenosis of the left main coronary artery, or >50% stenosis in at least two major epicardial arteries.; or positive stress test (ST depression equal to or greater than 2 mm or a positive nuclear perfusion scintigram)
      • Multi-vessel percutaneous angioplasty (PTCA) and/or stent equal to or greater than 90 days prior to ApneaLinkTM assessment
      • Multi-vessel coronary artery bypass surgery (CABG) >1 year prior to ApneaLinkTM assessment
    • Cerebrovascular disease

      • Previous stroke (includes definite or presumed cerebral ischaemia/infarction and intracerebral but not subarachnoid haemorrhage) equal to or greater than 90 days prior to ApneaLinkTM assessment or minor disabling stroke with minimal residual neurological disability (modified Rankin Score of '0 = no symptoms' or '1 = No significant disability despite symptoms, able to carry out all usual duties and activities' within 7 days of stroke onset) ≥7 days prior to ApneaLinkTM assessment.
      • Previous transient ischaemic event (TIA) of the brain or retina (symptoms <24 hours) but not of presumed vertebrobasilar system ischemia. The TIA diagnosis must be confirmed by a suitably qualified clinician (≥7 days but <1year prior to ApneaLinkTM assessment)
  3. Patients have moderate-severe OSA (equivalent to apnea plus hypopneas index [AHI] >30 per hour of sleep) as determined by a ≥ 4% oxygen dip rate > 12/ h on overnight testing using the ApneaLinkTM device and confirmed by the SAVE core lab in Adelaide upon receipt of the ApneaLinkTM data

  4. Patients are able and willing to give appropriate informed consent

Exclusion criteria

Patients will be excluded from entry if ANY of the criteria listed below are met:

  1. Any condition that in the opinion of the responsible physician or investigator makes the potential participant unsuitable for the study. For example,

    • co-morbid disease with severe disability or likelihood of death
    • significant memory, perceptual, or behavioural disorder
    • neurological deficit (e.g. limb paresis) preventing self administration of the CPAP mask
    • contraindication to CPAP use e.g. pneumothorax
    • residence sufficiently remote from the clinic to preclude follow-up clinic visits
  2. Any planned coronary or carotid revascularisation procedure in the next 6 months

  3. Severe respiratory disease defined as

    • severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (FEV1/FVC < 70% and FEV1 < 50% predicted), or
    • resting, awake SaO2 < 90% by ApneaLinkTM device
  4. New York Heart Association (NYHA) categories III-IV of heart failure

  5. Other household member enrolled in SAVE trial or using CPAP

  6. Prior use of CPAP treatment for OSA

  7. Increased risk of a sleep-related accident and/or excessive daytime sleepiness, defined by any one of the following:

    • driver occupation (eg truck, taxi)
    • 'fall-asleep' accident or 'near miss' accident in previous 12 months
    • high (> 15) score on the Epworth Sleepiness Scale
  8. Severe nocturnal desaturation documented on the ApneaLinkTM device as > 10% overnight recording time with arterial oxygen saturation of < 80%

  9. Cheyne-Stokes Respiration (CSResp)

    • CSResp identified on ApneaLinkTM nasal pressure recording by typical crescendo-decrescendo pattern of respiration with associated apneas and/or hypopneas in the absence of inspiratory flow limitation.
    • patients excluded if > 50% of nasal pressure - defined apneas and hypopneas judged to be due to CSResp.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

2,500 participants in 2 patient groups

1
Experimental group
Description:
CPAP plus standard care of cardiovascular risk factors
Treatment:
Device: Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP)
2
Active Comparator group
Description:
Standard care alone
Treatment:
Other: Standard care

Trial contacts and locations

5

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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