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Non Invasive Evaluation of Muscle Hypoxia in COPD Patient (EVANIMUS)

Not Applicable
Conditions
Hypoxemia
COPD (Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease)
Interventions
Other: Oxygen supplementation
Registration Number
NCT03921983
Lead Sponsor
University Hospital, Clermont-Ferrand
Brief Summary

Peripheral muscle oxidative function is altered in COPD(chronic obstrutive pulmonary disease) patients. Multiple factors could contribute to this dysfunction including chronic hypoxia and deconditioning (sedentarity).

The evaluation of mitochondrial function is based on invasive method (muscle biopsy and in vitro respirometry) or magnetic resonance spectroscopy limited to small muscle groups. Recently, a non invasive method has been described using Near InfraRed Spectroscopy (NIRS). During arterial occlusion, muscle deoxygenation is only dependent of local oxygen consumption. The time constant recovery (k) of the deoxygenation during repeated ischemia periods has been shown to be correlated to measurements of maximal mitochondrial capacity.

k is lower in COPD patients compared to smokers without bronchial obstruction. However, the influence of arterial hypoxia has never been studied precisely, no more than the confounding effect of deconditioning on k.

So , the aim is to compare k in COPD patients with chronic hypoxemia (treated with long term oxygenotherapy, LTOT+ group) and patients without hypoxia, matched for their physical activity (LTOT- group).

The hypothe is that k will be lower in LTOT+ group compared to LTOT- group and that short term O2 supplementation will improve it, which would suggest a muscle hypoxia. By contrast, O2 should not influence k in LOT- group, in whom it is mainly determined by muscle conditioning.

Detailed Description

Investigator will compare mVO2 time constant in 2 groups of COPD (chronic obstrutive pulmonary disease) patients matched for age, sex, physical activity (estimated by GPAQ questionnaire (Global Physical Activity Questionnaire)), one with chronic hypoxemia (LTOT+ group) and one without blood gas abnormalities (LTOT- group)..

Inclusion visit It will allow to calculate physical activity in Mets.min/week, from the GPAQ questionnaire. The patient will also be accustomed to the repeated arterial occlusion procedure. A pneumatic cuff will be wrapped around the thigh and will be progressively inflated to a suprasystolic value (rapid air inflation system Hokanson), from 160 mmHg up to tolerated maximal pressure (max 220 mmHg).

Experimental visit

* Muscle biopsy. A biopsy of the vastus lateralis will be performed while breathing ambient air. After disinfection and anesthesia of skin and subcutaneous tissue, an automatic biopsy gun (Monopty Bard 14G) will be introduced in the muscle and a 20 mg biopsy will be withdrawn. The maximal mitochondrial O2 consumption and mitochondrial affinity for O2 will be immediately measured with high resolution respirometry (Oroboros, 10 mg tissue). A 10 mg fragment will be stored in liquid nitrogen for mRNA analysis of hypoxia driven genes (Hypoxia-inducible Factor 1, Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor, Carbonic Anhydrase 9, Heme Oxygenase 1).

* mVO2 time constant measurement (k, min-1) in ambient air. A NIRS probe (Oxymon III) will be placed on the thigh (contralateral to the muscle biopsy) and secured with an elastic wrap. The NIRS signal will be displayed continuously and recorded on a software (Oxysoft) The inflation cuff will be placed upstream the NIRS probe. After 5 to 10 isometric contractions of the quadriceps, the cuff will be rapidly inflated (maximal tolerated pressure determined during the inclusion visit) and deflated according to a predetermined protocol: 5 s /5 s 5 times, followed by 7 s /7 s 5 times and then 10 s/10 s 10 times. The deoxygenation kinetics (% deoxygenation/min) will be calculated for every occlusion and these deoxygenation indices will be expressed over time in order to calculate the time constant of the exponential relationship (k, min-1). This sequence will be repeated twice and the k values will be averaged.

* mVO2 time constant measurement with O2. Oxygen therapy will be given to the patient for 1 hour before repeating the k determination as described above. Oxygen flow will be set to the habitual flow rate in the LTOT+ group, and an arbitrary 3 L/min flow rate in the LTOT- group.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
UNKNOWN
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
70
Inclusion Criteria
  • COPD diagnostic
  • Both sex
  • 18 <Age <80 years old
  • LTOT- group : PaO2 ≥ 65 mmHg and SaO2≥ 92%
  • LTOT+ group: long term oxygenotherapy prescribed for more than 3 months, with daily use between 12 and 15 hours.

Patients in both groups will be matched for age (± 5 years), sex and physical activity estimated by GPAQ questionnaire (± 15% Mets.min/week).

Exclusion Criteria
  • Recent cardiorespiratory exacerbation (<6 weeks).
  • Pulmonary rehabilitation program during the last 2 months
  • Continuous LTOT (24 hours) or deambulation O2 therapy alone
  • Anticoagulant drugs
  • Hematocrit outside the normal range (35-50%)

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
LTOT +Oxygen supplementationCOPD patients with long term oxygenotherapy
LTOT -Oxygen supplementationCOPD patients without chronic hypoxemia (no LTOT)
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
mVO2 recovery time constant (k) measured while breathing ambient airday 1

Time constant (min-1) of NIRS muscle oxygenation kinetics following repetitive arterial occlusions

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
variation of k with oxygen supplementationday 1

Difference of the time constant (k, min-1) between 2 conditions: ambient air and with oxygen supplementation

Mitochondrial affinity for O2day 1

Apparent K (µmol O2/min/g tissue) measured with respirometry on permeabilized muscle fibers at decreasing concentration of O2

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

CHU de Clermont-Ferrand

🇫🇷

Clermont-Ferrand, France

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