Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
About
Atomoxetine-plus-oxybutynin therapy (AtoOxy) has been shown to substantially reduce obstructive sleep apnea severity (OSA) in about half of patients. Here, the investigators will study which patients respond meaningfully to therapy using pathophysiological traits measured at baseline sleep studies.
Full description
The primary goal of the current study is to test the central hypothesis that therapeutic efficacy of AtoOxy depends on underlying patient pathophysiology.
Aim 1 - Advanced analysis of clinical polysomnography will be used to estimate the OSA traits and classify patients as 'predicted responders' or 'predicted nonresponders'. Investigators will prospectively test whether AtoOxy efficacy is greater in predicted responders.
Aim 2 - Pooling preliminary and prospective data, investigators will test the hypotheses that the following pathophysiological traits are associated with, and therefore predict, greater efficacy: less-severe upper airway collapsibility (less improvement needed to re-establish airflow), lower loop gain (less severe ventilatory control instability), higher arousal threshold (greater scope for muscle activation without arousal), and greater upper airway muscle compensation (functional muscle reflex apparatus).
Aim 3 - Investigators will test the hypothesis that treatment efficacy will be greater in patients with tongue-related upper airway obstruction per previous drug-induced sleep endoscopy results (anterior-posterior collapse patterns).
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Any uncontrolled medical condition
Current use of the medications under investigation
Use of medications expected to stimulate or depress respiration (including opioids, barbiturates, doxapram, almitrine, theophylline, 4-hydroxybutanoic acid).
Current use of hypnotic medications (trazodone, eszopiclone, benzodiazepines).
Current use of SNRIs/SSRIs or anticholinergic medications.
Conditions likely to affect obstructive sleep apnea physiology: neuromuscular disease or other major neurological disorder, heart failure (also below), or any other unstable major medical condition.
Respiratory disorders other than sleep disordered breathing: chronic hypoventilation/hypoxemia (awake SaO2 < 92% by oximetry) due to chronic obstructive pulmonary disease or other respiratory conditions.
Other sleep disorders: periodic limb movements, narcolepsy, or parasomnias.
Contraindications for atomoxetine and oxybutynin, including:
Claustrophobia
Pregnancy or nursing
n.b. Development of new hypertension that is recognized on the final day of study medications during outcomes collection will not be used as stopping criteria for discontinuing outcomes collection.
Participants that are sexually active and able to become pregnant must agree to use birth control for the entire study.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
22 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Central trial contact
Scott A Sands, PhD; Laura K Gell, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal