Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Suspended

SuspendedNCT03647891

Impact of Early Diagnosis and Treatment of OSA on Hospital Readmission in Hospitalized Cardiac Patients

The Impact of Early Diagnosis and Treatment of Obstructive Sleep Apnea on Hospital Readmission in Hospitalized Cardiac Patients: the CV Readmit Clinical Trial

Status
Suspended
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
150 (estimated)
Sponsor
Kaiser Permanente · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The purpose of this study is to determine whether early diagnosis of obstructive sleep apnea and initiation of and adherence to CPAP therapy in hospitalized cardiac patients would impact 30-day hospital readmission rates.

Detailed description

Study investigators have designed a single-center, randomized control trial to evaluate the impact of early diagnosis and treatment of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) in hospitalized cardiac patients on hospital readmission, symptoms, and healthcare utilization. This study targets a high risk population (hospitalized cardiac patients) and targets early initiation of continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) therapy in patients diagnosed with OSA. Investigators intend to enroll all consenting participants hospitalized with a primary cardiac diagnosis, which include congestive heart failure, arrhythmia's, and acute coronary syndromes. The study is unique and the answer to its question - whether early diagnosis of OSA and initiation of and adherence to CPAP therapy in hospitalized cardiac patients will reduce 30-day readmission rates - is unknown. The objective is twofold: to improve quality of care and decrease preventable hospitalizations through early diagnosis and implementation of this early diagnosis and intervention model for this subset of patients may slow progression of cardiac disease, offset a large public health and financial burden, and improve overall outcomes. Study investigators believe that the study, which involves human subjects, is in accordance with general ethical principles. It should be noted that diagnosis and subsequent treatment of OSA during hospitalization is not part of routine practice, and that the control group truly would follow "usual care". Moreover, patients who are deemed very sick (as outlined in the exclusion criteria) will be excluded from the study. Finally, half of enrolled participants will receive early CPAP therapy which may potentially benefit those patients beyond what is currently "usual care". Study Design The study is a single-center, randomized control trial designed to evaluate the impact of early diagnosis and treatment of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) in hospitalized cardiac patients on hospital readmission, symptoms, and healthcare utilization. Consecutive patients who meet inclusion criteria hospitalized with a primary diagnosis of heart failure, arrhythmia, or acute coronary syndrome will be asked to participate in the study. Patients who agree and sign consent will undergo a portable sleep study to diagnose OSA-predominant sleep disordered breathing. Patients will also complete a questionnaire packet consisting of the following standardized questionnaires: sleep history questionnaire, Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS), EQ5D-5L, and PROMIS questionnaire. Each patient who meets inclusion criteria and consents to the study will undergo an inpatient portable sleep study (ApneaLink, Resmed Corp). This is a Type III study which is an unattended study that measures nasal pressure, respiratory effort, oxygen saturation, and body position. A study investigator will apply the portable device, and a board-certified sleep medicine physician (co-investigators) will interpret these studies. The study will be performed while the patient is on room air (not on oxygen), thus the study may not be applied on the first hospitalized night (if oxygen therapy is required), but delayed until the patient is appropriate to be off oxygen. A diagnosis of OSA will be made if the apnea-hypopnea index with 4% oxygen desaturation is greater than 5 (AHI4%≥5) with at least 50% of events consistent with obstructive rather than central physiology. Study participants with OSA will then be randomized into one of two pathways: Intervention Pathway and Usual Care Pathway. Intervention Pathway Patients will receive CPAP therapy in the hospital followed by home CPAP therapy. A sleep center respiratory therapy/sleep technologist case manager will perform a bedside mask fit, CPAP education, and set up their outpatient follow-up appointments with the sleep center. Their home CPAP therapy will be a loaner from the sleep medicine department that includes wireless connectivity so that adherence data is available to the investigators throughout the duration of the study. Furthermore, the patients will be entered into our usual automated platform (USleep; ResMed Corp) in which patients with suboptimal CPAP use will be sent messages (email or text based on patient preference) in order to ensure adherence to therapy. This platform is already a standard part of our usual care. The patients will receive CPAP in addition to the contemporary standard of care pharmacotherapy for their underlying cardiac condition(s). They will be asked to follow up at the Fontana Sleep Center within 1 month after discharge for assessment of CPAP use and asked to complete the aforementioned questionnaire packet (with the exception of the STOP BANG questionnaire). During the appointment, the sleep center will troubleshoot CPAP use when appropriate; otherwise, requests for additional troubleshooting will be at the discretion of the patient (as is currently our usual care). In addition, patients will receive a $50 stipend for participation in the study. Patients will be assessed for readmission rates, time to readmission, adherence to CPAP therapy, and presence of symptoms at the 1-month period Usual Care Pathway Patients will receive contemporary standard of care pharmacotherapy for their underlying cardiac condition(s) and will not receive CPAP therapy for the duration of the study. They will be asked to follow up at the Fontana Sleep Center within 1 month after discharge for a repeat outpatient portable sleep study and asked to complete the aforementioned questionnaire packet (with the exception of the STOP BANG questionnaire). The results of the outpatient portable sleep studies will be compared with the in-patient portable sleep study. At the one-month follow up appointment, patients will receive a $50 stipend for participation in the study. Patients will be assessed for readmission rates, time to readmission, adherence to CPAP therapy, and presence of symptoms at the 1-month period

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEContinuous Positive Airway PressureCPAP is an FDA approved therapy machine for patients diagnosed with OSA. CPAP provides positive air pressure to the patients throat to ensure the patients airway stays open during sleep. CPAP is the gold standard treatment for OSA, but there is limited research that demonstrates whether or not CPAP can improve clinical outcomes in patients with cardiovascular disease. Therefore, our investigators plan to initiate CPAP therapy in patients hospitalized for cardiovascular disease to investigate whether there is an improvement in cardiac function and clinical outcomes (e.g. mortality).

Timeline

Start date
2023-07-01
Primary completion
2024-09-01
Completion
2025-04-01
First posted
2018-08-27
Last updated
2022-07-06

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Regulatory

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03647891. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.