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The Effect of Oxygen Therapy on 6MWD in PAH and CTEPH Patients With Hypoxemia (SOPHA)

H

Heidelberg University

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 2

Conditions

CTEPH
Oxygen Deficiency
Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension

Treatments

Drug: Oxygen

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04207593
2018-11SO*

Details and patient eligibility

About

Treatment of O2 naïve patients with PAH will be included in this investigator-initiated trial (IIT) to assess efficacy and safety of oxygen substitution. Nocturnal oxygen substitution improved the 6MWD compared to placebo in one clinical trial in PAH patients. Due to the positive results in the treatment of patients with PAH, the initiation of this proof-of-concept study is justified.

Full description

Most patients with PAH, except those with congenital heart defects and pulmonary-to-systemic shunts, have minor degrees of hypoxemia at rest and during the night.Current recommendations including the pneumological guidelines for LTOT are based on evidence in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, as data for patients with PH are lacking: When O2 partial pressure is repeatedly <8 kPa (<60 mmHg, alternatively, 90% of O2 saturation), patients are advised to use O2 to achieve a saturation of >8 kPa. The use of ambulatory O2 can be considered when there is evidence of a symptomatic response or correction of exercise-induced desaturation.

There are only few studies investigating the effect of oxygen supply in pulmonary hypertension, most of which merely investigate acute effects of O2 administration. Short-term oxygen administration has been shown to reduce mean pulmonary arterial pressure, pulmonary vascular resistance and to increase cardiac output in PAH patients. In one study, oxygen supply also reversed the progression of PH in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). One recent randomized-controlled trial indicates that O2 given during cardiopulmonary exercise significantly improves maximal work rate and endurance. Furthermore, nocturnal oxygen supply for one week significantly improved 6-minute walking distance in patients with PH, sleep-associated breathing difficulties, exercise performance during the day as well as cardiac repolarisation. Patients with Eisenmenger's syndrome gain little benefit from nocturnal O2 therapy.

Whether these positive effects of O2 supplementation during exercise would translate into long-term improvements of exercise capacity, quality of life, hemodynamics and disease progression is not known to date. Up to now, there are no randomised studies suggesting that long-term O2 therapy is indicated or when it should be initiated.

Enrollment

20 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion Criteria Patients in both groups (n = 20; n=10 each group) with precapillary PH, WHO class I -IV (mPAP ≥ 25 mm Hg, pulmonary arterial occlusion pressure ≤15 mm Hg), who are stable on optimized pharmacological treatment for at least six weeks and who do not suffer from other cardio-pulmonary disease will be recruited if arterial or capillary O2 partial pressure is (<60 mmHg; alternatively, 90% of O2 saturation) at rest and/or during physical activity (O2 partial pressure <60 mmHg pO2 90 % ).

  • men and women 18 years of age or older
  • patient is diagnosed with Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension (World Health Organization (WHO) Category Group 1 (by the WHO Clinical classification system)), including Idiopathic (IPAH), Heritable PAH (HPAH, Familial PAH), associated PAH (APAH) and CTEPH, with exceptions as noted in exclusion criteria
  • patient is willing and able to provide written informed consent
  • patient is willing and able to comply with the protocol, including required follow-up visits
  • Patients experiencing oxygen desaturations ≤90% (or pO2 below 60 mmHg) at rest and/or oxygen desaturations ≤90% (or pO2 below 60 mmHg) during physical activity
  • patient has a stable functional class of PAH with no changes of medication during the last two weeks before inclusion

Exclusion Criteria

  • Patient is a female who is pregnant, nursing, or of child bearing potential and is not on a reliable form of birth control
  • patient with pulmonary venous hypertension
  • significant functional limitation in lung function tests (FEV1 <60%,TLC <60%) and CT morphological signs of pulmonary disease
  • significant left heart disease, requiring acute pharmacological or interventional treatment
  • unstable conditions requiring pharmacological or other treatment, intensive care or relevant severe concomitant disease
  • patient is enrolled, has participated within the last thirty days, or is planning to participate, in a concurrent drug and/or device study during the course of this clinical trial. Co-enrolment in concurrent trials is only allowed with documented pre-approval from the study manager that there is not a concern that co-enrolment could confound the results of this trial.
  • patient has been initiated on a new oral or parenteral PAH therapy in the last two weekspatient with a cardiac index (CI) <1.8L/min/m^2
  • active smoking Status
  • patient with severe resting desaturation (repeatedly SpO2 <80%) or severe exercise-induced desaturation (SpO2 ≤75% for ≥10 minutes)

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Crossover Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

20 participants in 2 patient groups

Oxygen Therapy provided
Active Comparator group
Description:
Patients will be divided in a supplemental-oxygen group (primary intervention group) throughout the study
Treatment:
Drug: Oxygen
no-supplemental-oxygen group (control group)
Sham Comparator group
Description:
Patients of the control group will beginn the study without Oxygen Therapie and will be offered to participate in the interventional treatment arm after they have terminated the control period (partial cross-over; secondary intervention group).
Treatment:
Drug: Oxygen

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Ekkehard Grünig, Prof., MD; Benjamin Egenlauf, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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