Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03160456

Domiciliary Transcutaneous Electrical Stimulation in Obstructive Sleep Apnoea

Randomised Controlled Trial of Domiciliary Transcutaneous Electrical Stimulation in Obstructive Sleep Apnoea

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
56 (actual)
Sponsor
Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 85 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The aim of this study is to assess the efficacy of transcutaneous electrical stimulation of the pharyngeal dilator muscles in patients with obstructive sleep apnoea in the community compared to usual care, and follow the patients for three months, as well as to assess compliance of non-invasive electrical stimulation of the upper airway dilator muscles in obstructive sleep apnoea patients over time and evaluate the control of symptoms and improvement in quality of life.

Detailed description

Obstructive sleep apnoea is highly prevalent, with the obesity epidemic increasing the problem. The best treatment for uncomplicated and moderate-severe OSA remains CPAP therapy. However, long-term adherence to treatment with CPAP is poor and there are few alternatives. Electrical stimulation of the dilator muscles of the upper airway has been shown to reduce nocturnal apnoeas significantly using an invasive approach, hypoglossal nerve stimulation, as well as by non-invasive transcutaneous stimulation. Although non-invasive transcutaneous stimulation may not be as effective as CPAP therapy in many OSA patients it could be an important option to treat some of the large number of patients who fail CPAP and might also be of use in those whose OSA is not judged sufficiently severe to warrant CPAP. The investigators propose a study to use a transcutaneous electrical stimulation device in selected patients with OSA who do not tolerate CPAP therapy following assessment of the upper airway. Participants will undergo a baseline sleep study (polysomnography/home-based respiratory polygraphy). Following minimisation for gender (male/female) and OSA severity (mild/moderate-severe) they will be randomised into active treatment arm (transcutaneous electrical stimulation) or usual care (ongoing CPAP therapy). Patients will be treated over a period of 3-months in the community, re-assessed (including polysomnography/home-based respiratory polygraphy) and the results will be compared against usual care, ongoing CPAP therapy. This study will help to prepare a definitive multi-centre randomized controlled trial using the non-invasive method of upper airway stimulation in OSA. The primary aim of this study is to assess efficacy and generate an accurate sample size estimation, test the subjective willingness of patients to use and objectively determined compliance with the treatment over a long period, as well as to specify the drop-out rate. The improvement in sleep apnoea will be the primary outcome measures. The symptomatic response, feasibility of the method, including compliance, comfort, adverse events, will be the secondary outcome measure. An ad-hoc analysis will be performed in the responder group (improvement in the apnoea-hypopnea index (AHI) by \>50% from baseline OR improvement in the 4% oxygen-desaturation index (ODI) \>25% from baseline OR AHI/4%ODI \<5/hour at follow up).

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICETranscutaneous electrical stimulationThe device needs to be started by pressing the 'on' button. Once the device is turned on the current intensity can be increased by pushing the '+' button and lowered by pushing the '-' button. When a comfortable skin sensation is felt the patients should press the '-' button once more. At that time the device stimulates with a low current which is not felt but provides a neuromuscular tone to the muscles whilst asleep. The device is kept on all night and in the morning taken off with the hydrogel and disconnected. Once disconnected it should be turned off by pressing the 'off' button.
DEVICEContinuous positive airway pressureCPAP will be applied according to usual clinical care, the follow up will be organised in the same way as the active intervention group.

Timeline

Start date
2018-06-18
Primary completion
2023-02-08
Completion
2023-05-05
First posted
2017-05-19
Last updated
2023-05-09

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United Kingdom

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03160456. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.