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Sleep Disordered Breathing, Obesity and Pregnancy Study (SOAP)

F

Francesca Facco, MD

Status

Completed

Conditions

Obese
Sleep Disordered Breathing
Pregnancy

Treatments

Other: Sleep hygiene
Device: sham-CPAP
Device: CPAP

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT02086448
PRO13080159
R01HL120354 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)
K12HD043441 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of this study is to better understand how sleep apnea, a common sleep disorder in which a person has one or more pauses in breathing or shallow breaths while sleeping, may affect pregnancy and to determine the effect of Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP), a treatment that uses mild air pressure to keep the airways open during sleep, for pregnant women with sleep apnea.

Full description

Emerging data support a link between sleep disordered breathing (SDB) and adverse pregnancy outcomes, particularly preeclampsia. Furthermore, SDB, which is characterized by intermittent nocturnal hypoxia-reoxygenation as well as sleep disruption, results in endothelial dysfunction and metabolic dysregulation, the same biological pathways that have been associated with adverse pregnancy outcomes. Obesity is a well-known risk factor for both adverse pregnancy outcomes and SDB, and has been associated with the same aforementioned biological aberrations. Therefore, obesity complicates the definition of a causal relationship between SDB and pregnancy outcomes. While some classic cardiovascular risk factors (prehypertension) are certainly relevant in pregnancy, there are also well-established risk factors that are unique to pregnancy (uterine vascular stiffness, placental angiogenic factors). The interplay between SDB, obesity and these unique cardiovascular risk factors remains undefined, and this proposal aims to address this knowledge gap. Without this data, our ability to understand how we can mitigate these risks through the use of therapeutic interventions for SDB, such as CPAP (continuous positive airway pressure), is compromised. To further address this knowledge gap, we will make use of the placenta's ability to accumulate evidence of damage over time and provide a record of maternal vascular health throughout gestation. Numerous placental lesions deriving from maternal vascular disease have been identified and can be readily detected on placental pathology. These lesions can provide a measure of the severity of hypoxic stress experienced by the fetus during gestation.

The investigators' central hypothesis is that SDB is an effect modifier that increases maternal cardiovascular risk and placental hypoxic injury in obese pregnant women, and that CPAP treatment during pregnancy will result in an improved cardiovascular risk and placental profile. To test this hypothesis the investigaotrs will identify a cohort of obese women both with and without SDB. The investigators will examine SDB's impact on maternal vascular stiffness (uterine artery Doppler), angiogenesis (pregnancy specific angiogenic factors e.g., sFLT-1) and metabolism (insulin resistance) across pregnancy (Aim 1). The investigators will perform a randomized controlled trial of autotitrating- CPAP verses sham-CPAP in pregnancy to examine the impact of CPAP treatment during pregnancy on cardiovascular risk (Aim 2) and will explore the interplay between SDB, CPAP and evidence of maternal vascular disease and chronic fetal hypoxia by evaluating the placental profile of obese women with and without SDB (Aim 3).

Enrollment

242 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • women between 14 0/7 and 20 6/7 weeks gestation at the time of their initial PSG assessment.
  • Pregnancy and current BMI >=30
  • Self-reported frequent snoring (>=3x/week over past month) or self-reported non-snorer.

Exclusion criteria

  • diagnosis of pregestational diabetes.
  • self-report a history of sleep apena and who are using or were receommended by a physican to use a PAP device already
  • twins

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

242 participants in 4 patient groups

Obese, SDB negative
No Intervention group
Description:
No intervention, observational comparison group
Obese, SDB postive, CPAP
Active Comparator group
Description:
Therapeutic CPAP
Treatment:
Device: CPAP
Obese, SDB postive, sham-CPAP
Sham Comparator group
Description:
Sham (non-therapeutic) CPAP
Treatment:
Device: sham-CPAP
Obese, SDB postive, sleep hygiene
Other group
Description:
Sleep hygiene information and local sleep resources
Treatment:
Other: Sleep hygiene

Trial documents
2

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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