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Trials / Not Yet Recruiting

Not Yet RecruitingNCT07210606

Central Apnea in Heart Failure: Physiological Mechanisms to Inform Treatment

Status
Not Yet Recruiting
Phase
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
200 (estimated)
Sponsor
VA Office of Research and Development · Federal
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Central sleep apnea (CSA) is common in patients with heart failure and those using opioid analgesics. Unfortunately, effective treatment of central apnea remains elusive, pressure therapy given the modest efficiency of positive airway pressure therapy. The focus of this proposal is to identify mechanistic pathways to guide future therapeutic interventions for central sleep apnea based on the strong premise that multi-modality therapy will normalize respiration and hence mitigate adverse long-term consequences of CSA. The investigators' proposed studies will test combination therapies, including positive airway pressure (PAP) plus a pharmacological agent who have heart failure or are using opioid analgesics. The investigators anticipate that findings will inform future clinical trials to improve care and quality of life among Veterans suffering from central sleep apnea, which remains difficult to treat using existing approaches.

Detailed description

The objective in this project is to test mechanistic pathways to inform future clinical studies investigating the potential treatment of central sleep apnea (CSA) in Veterans with heart failure and reduced ejection fraction (HF). The long-term goal is to transform the care of Veterans living with these two conditions. The investigators will test two key determinants of recurrent CSA in Veterans with HF: augmented peripheral chemoreceptor activity and respiratory arousals. Specifically, the project will utilize a novel PAP plus approach, combining PAP therapy to alleviate upper airway obstruction with a specific intervention to target the mechanistic underpinnings of CSA. The experiments will capitalize on the plasticity of the CO2 reserve as the gateway to the resolution of CSA. The investigators will suppress arousals or dampen augmented PCR activity while maintaining upper airway patency with PAP. The long-term goal is to inform future multi-modality intervention studies. To this end, the following Specific Aims will be addressed in Veterans with HF and CSA. Specific Aim (1): To determine the effect of decreasing respiratory arousals on the propensity to CSA. The investigators hypothesize that combined PAP and trazodone therapy will be superior to PAP alone in elevating the arousal threshold, widening the CO2 reserve (primary outcome), and decreasing CSA indices. Specific Aim (2): To determine the effect of decreased peripheral chemoreceptor sensitivity on the propensity to CSA. The investigators hypothesize that combined PAP and supplemental O2 (targeting peripheral chemoreceptor sensitivity) will be superior to PAP alone in widening the CO2 reserve (primary outcome), reducing controller gain, and decreasing CSA indices. The proposed studies are innovative, testing mechanistic "PAP Plus" approach targeting underlying causes of CSA and alleviating upper airway obstruction with PAP. These studies will inform future clinical trials to transform central apnea care in patients with heart failure.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGTrazodone + PAP therapyThe central apnea index and the apneic threshold will be compared under two conditions: trazodone or placebo. In addition, participants will get PAP therapy during both the conditions.
DRUGOxygen + PAP therapyThe central apnea index and the apneic threshold will be compared under two conditions: oxygen or room air. In addition, participants will get PAP therapy during both the conditions.

Timeline

Start date
2026-10-01
Primary completion
2030-06-30
Completion
2030-12-31
First posted
2025-10-07
Last updated
2026-01-07

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Regulatory

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07210606. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.