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RecruitingNCT05558501

Intermittent Hypoxia-initiated Plasticity in Humans: A Multi-pronged Therapeutic Approach to Treat Sleep Apnea and Overlapping Co-morbidities

Status
Recruiting
Phase
Phase 1 / Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
60 (estimated)
Sponsor
VA Office of Research and Development · Federal
Sex
All
Age
30 Years – 60 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The prevalence of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is high in the United States and is a major health concern. This disorder is linked to numerous heart, blood vessel and nervous system abnormalities, along with increased tiredness while performing exercise likely because of a reduced blood supply to skeletal muscles. The gold standard treatment of OSA with continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) in many cases does not lead to significant improvements in health outcomes because the recommended number of hours of treatment per night is often not achieved. Thus, development of novel treatments to eliminate apnea and lessen the occurrence of associated health conditions is important. The investigators will address this mandate by determining if repeated exposure to mild intermittent hypoxia (MIH) reduces heart and blood vessel dysfunction and tiredness/ fatigue experienced while exercise performance. The investigators propose that exposure to MIH has a multipart effect. MIH directly targets heart and blood vessel associated conditions, while simultaneously increasing upper airway stability and improving sleep quality. These modifications may serve to directly decrease breathing episodes and may also serve to improve usage of CPAP. Independent of its effect, MIH may serve as an adjunctive therapy which provides another path to reducing heart and blood vessel abnormalities that might ultimately result in improvements in exercise capacity and reverse performance fatigue in individuals with OSA.

Detailed description

The prevalence of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is high in the Veteran population and this disorder is linked to numerous cardiovascular, neurocognitive and metabolic abnormalities. Thus, OSA is a major health concern in the Veteran population. Treatment of OSA in many cases does not lead to significant improvements in outcome measures. This inadequacy may be a consequence of reduced treatment adherence with continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) or because the effect of CPAP on outcome measures is small or absent in some patients despite adequate adherence. Consequently, innovative therapies that directly impact co-morbidities linked to OSA or that increase CPAP adherence could lead to improved outcome measures. In the recent funding cycle, the investigators established that repeated daily exposure to mild intermittent hypoxia (MIH) coupled with CPAP modifies autonomic nervous system activity and dramatically decreases blood pressure compared to CPAP treatment alone. Because MIH was coupled with CPAP, the independent effect of MIH on blood pressure was not established. Moreover, it was not established if these outcomes were sustained for a prolonged time period (i.e. weeks to months). Although the investigators obtained some indirect evidence that modifications in autonomic nervous system activity were coupled to the reduction in blood pressure, the investigators did not establish if modifications in microvascular function were evident. Microvascular dysfunction together with sympatho-vagal imbalance may have consequences not only for peripheral vascular resistance and blood pressure but also for muscle perfusion and metabolism, thereby limiting exercise performance and increasing fatigability in patients with OSA. Thus, reductions in blood pressure and improvement in microvascular function following treatment with MIH might serve to improve exercise capacity and reverse performance fatigue in individuals with OSA. Besides its potential effect on autonomic and cardiovascular function, the investigators and others previously established that acute exposure to MIH initiates sustained increases in upper airway muscle activity in humans. This sustained increase is a form of respiratory plasticity known as long-term facilitation. However, in the absence of CPAP the investigators have shown that acute MIH immediately prior to or during sleep leads to increases in apnea severity. This might occur because the manifestation of long-term facilitation is absent in the presence of hypocapnia. Hypocapnia can be induced during sleep by the initiation of another form of plasticity known as progressive augmentation. However, it is possible that the combination of daily exposure to MIH administered many hours before the sleep period may mitigate the effects of progressive augmentation leading to increased upper airway stability. Independent of this possibility, the investigators showed in the previous funding cycle that increased upper airway stability following treatment with MIH was coupled to a reduction in therapeutic CPAP and improved adherence. However, improved adherence to CPAP might also be linked to an increase in the arousal threshold to both respiratory and non-respiratory stimuli. All the uncertainties outlined above will be addressed in the present proposal.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERMild Intermittent HypoxiaThe MIH protocol will be comprised of a 20-minute baseline period followed by exposure to twelve two-minute episodes of hypoxia \[partial pressure of end-tidal oxygen (PETO2)= 50 mmHg\]. Each episode will be interspersed with a 2-minute recovery period under normoxic conditions. The final episode will be followed by a 30-minute end-recovery period. The partial pressure of end-tidal carbon dioxide (PETCO2) will be sustained 2 mmHg above baseline values for the last ten minutes of baseline and throughout the remainder of the protocol. To rapidly induce a PETO2 of 50 mmHg participants will inspire a gas mixture comprised of 8 % oxygen and 92 % nitrogen from a non-diffusible bag. To maintain PETO2 (i.e. 50 mmHg) and PETCO2 (i.e. 2 mmHg above baseline) at the desired levels supplemental oxygen and carbon dioxide will be added to the inspiratory line from the output of a flow meter device that receives inputs from tanks of 100 % oxygen and 100 % carbon dioxide.
OTHERSham MIHDuring "sham MIH" the participants will be exposed to compressed air (the equivalent of room air).

Timeline

Start date
2023-01-01
Primary completion
2026-12-31
Completion
2027-12-31
First posted
2022-09-28
Last updated
2025-12-04

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05558501. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.