Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
CPAP will be applied to normal volunteers inorder to understand CPAP's effects on breathing and chest wall motion.
Full description
CPAP is a non-invasive ventilation technique that is commonly used to treat sleep apnea. Using a small air-pump, tubing and facemask, it provides a constant stream of pressurized air to the upper airways and lungs. Some of the physiological effects noted during CPAP are hyperinflation of the lungs, stabilizing and flattening of the diaphragm, and decrease in tidal volume. The effects on duration of breath hold are unknown. During radiation treatment, these effects are expected to reduce tumor and organ motion which reduces the volume of normal tissue being irradiated and also creates favorable treatment geometry by moving the heart away from the anterior chest wall. An important advantage of CPAP compared to other techniques is that active patient cooperation is not required. The potential exists to combine use of CPAP with other respiratory management techniques such as breath hold and improve overall effectiveness. When used in sleep apnea it is well tolerated and poses little risk to patients. There are no published reports of the use of CPAP in radiation therapy.
In initial studies the Varian RPM system was used to assess respiratory motion with and without CPAP for patients receiving radiation therapy. This commercially available, non-invasive system works by directing an infrared beam onto an infrared motion detector that is placed on the patients' upper abdomen. The detector records the change in abdomen position that occurs with respiration as a change in amplitude of the detector position. Interventions that effect respiration will be recorded by an increase or decrease in the amplitude of the detector motion. When used in breath hold, the detector remains in a fixed position with a very narrow gating window.
Based on initial experience with the RPM system, it has been found that approximately 1 hour of CPAP use is required to reduce diaphragm motion. Although early results are favorable using this approach, it is not certain that this is the best or most efficient method of use for all patients. The use of CPAP combined with breath hold techniques has not been studied.
The objectives of this study are to use the RPM system in normal volunteers to:
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Normal volunteers without a cancer diagnosis.
No contraindications to the use of CPAP
18-90 years of age
Ability to sign informed consent
Hebrew or English speakers
Exclusion criteria
Contraindications to CPAP
Under age 18 or above age 90 years
Inability to sign informed consent
Members of special populations (mental illness, pregnant women, prisoners, not legally competent).
History of severe active restrictive or obstructive lung disease (as defined as at least one hospitalization over previous two years)
Any medical condition requiring an inpatient hospitalization for more than 72 hours over the previous 2 years, aside from elective surgery.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
10 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Central trial contact
Eve Keret; Hila Gnessin
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal