Is Obstructive Sleep Apnea Important in the Development of Alzheimer's Disease?
- Conditions
- Obstructive Sleep ApneaSleep ApneaOSAAlzheimer Disease
- Interventions
- Other: Room AirOther: Supplemental OxygenDevice: Continuous Positive Airway Pressure Machine
- Registration Number
- NCT05094271
- Lead Sponsor
- University of California, San Diego
- Brief Summary
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is common in older adults and has recently been implicated in pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Research has shown that sleep disruptions have caused memory impairment. Sleep apnea is a form of sleep disruption. We would like to examine how obstructive sleep apnea may contribute to the progression of Alzheimer's disease.
- Detailed Description
Aim 1: We will assess the endotypes (mechanisms) underlying OSA in elderly individuals known to be high risk for AD (vs. non-OSA matched controls) using novel recently validated simplified techniques which do not require burdensome complex overnight experiments to assess endotypes (primary outcome loop gain). We will further assess the predicted response to O2 therapy in terms of respiratory outcomes among elderly OSA patients with varying levels of loop gain and pharyngeal collapsibility.
Hypothesis 1: A substantial proportion of high AD risk patients with OSA should be O2 responsive as predicted using pathophysiological assessments.
Aim 2: We will perform an overnight mechanistic study of oxygen therapy vs. room air in high AD risk patients with OSA (recruited from Aim 1 and others if necessary). Given the frequent intolerance of PAP in elderly patients, we anticipate that oxygen therapy may be a viable therapeutic approach in this fragile population. We will focus on respiratory outcomes (primary outcome: apnea hypopnea index) but also assess sleep dependent memory consolidation on word pairs task given the major impact in the elderly.
Hypothesis 2: O2, compared to room air, will improve OSA and neurocognitive outcomes in select elderly OSA patients at risk of AD.
Aim 3: Preclinical AD with OSA and non-OSA controls, from Aim 1 will have structural and molecular brain imaging focusing on hippocampal atrophy as a predictor of memory consolidation. We will also assess amyloid and tau in the medial temporal region as function of OSA severity and as a predictor of neurocognitive function. This aim will lay the groundwork for designing a robust clinical trial using neuroimaging outcomes.
Hypothesis 3: Impairment in memory consolidation is a function of hippocampal size in OSA patients at risk of AD.
Aim 4: We will perform a pilot randomized trial of oxygen vs. PAP therapy in OSA patients with preclinical AD.
Hypothesis 4: In preclinical AD with OSA, oxygen will be a viable therapeutic strategy to improve memory.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- RECRUITING
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 260
- Age 65-85 years
- Gender: Men or Women
- MOCA > 26
- Independently living and able to drive
- OSA (AHI ≥ 15/h) or no OSA
- Subjects must consent to waiving their right to obtain their PHS score (since the score is not yet actionable and could lead to social stress and ethical dilemmas)
- Currently smoking
- History of COPD or asthma
- Heart Failure Class III or IV, unstable cardiovascular disease, or uncontrolled hypertension
- Neuromuscular Disease
- Drowsy Driving (ESS > 18/24)
- Inability to complete study procedures, such as questionnaire that are only available/validated in English
- Lack of decisional capacity to provide informed consent
- Participants in whom magnetic resonance imaging Magnetic Resonance Imaging [MRI] is contraindicated including, but not limited to, those with a pacemaker, presence of metallic fragments near the eyes or spinal cord, or cochlear implant
- Presence of a brain tumor or lobar stroke
- Current drug or alcohol abuse/dependence
- Prisoners
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- CROSSOVER
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Room Air during PSG Room Air Subjects will be instrumented with a nasal cannula to receive 2L/min of pressurized room air. The room air will be kept at a fixed rate, however, the participant will be titrated to receive a max of 4 liters per min to maintain sats \>90% based on oximetry readings. Supplemental Oxygen for 3 Months Supplemental Oxygen Over a 12-week period, participants randomized to receive supplemental Oxygen for treatment of OSA will be contacted weekly to be asked about their adherence. Participants' adherence will also be monitored remotely through cloud-based monitoring. Supplemental Oxygen during PSG Supplemental Oxygen Subjects will be instrumented with a nasal cannula to receive 2L/min supplemental oxygen. The oxygen will be kept at a fixed rate, however, the participant will be titrated to receive a max of 4 liters per min to maintain sats \>90% based on oximetry readings. PAP Therapy for 3 Months Continuous Positive Airway Pressure Machine Over a 12-week period, participants randomized to receive supplemental PAP therapy for treatment of OSA will be contacted weekly to be asked about their adherence. Participants' adherence will also be monitored remotely through cloud-based monitoring.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Neuroimaging 2 hours MRI and PET Scans. This study will examine pre-clinical AD with OSA patients using brain imaging (structural MRI and amyloid/tau PET). MRI will be conducted to provide a structural image suitable for coregistering the PET image and observing white matter integrity. The scan should take 35 minutes. These will be MPRAGE images collected using the standard ADNI protocol at the in-house 3T MRI scanner at the UCSD Altman Clinical and Translational Research Institute (ACTRI). The PET scan should take 70-90 minutes.
Loop Gain (LG) 8 hours A method used to measure respiratory stability of the negative feedback chemoreflex control system using a specialized Positive Airway Pressure machine called a pCrit. The overall loop gain of the ventilatory system reflects the ratio of the ventilatory response to the disturbance that elicited the response (LG = ventilatory response/ventilatory disturbance). The higher the loop gain, the potentially more unstable the respiratory control system becomes.
Apnea Hypopnea Index 8 hours The number of times a person stops breathing and periods of shallow breathing with a marked decrease in blood oxygen concentration every hour on average. A score lower than five indicates normal sleep (no sleep apnea), 5-15 indicates mild sleep apnea, 15-30 indicates moderate sleep apnea, and a score greater than 30 indicates severe sleep apnea.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Pittsburg Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) 12 weeks A 19-item, self-rated questionnaire designed to measure sleep quality and disturbance over the past month. The sleep component scores are summed to yield a total score ranging from 0 to 21 with the higher total score (referred to as global score) indicating worse sleep quality.
Insomnia Severity Index (ISI) 12 weeks A 7-item self-report form to assess insomnia severity. Total score categories: 0-7 = No clinically significant insomnia, 8-14 = Subthreshold insomnia, 15-21 = Clinical insomnia (moderate severity), 22-28 = Clinical insomnia (severe).
Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS) 12 weeks A self-administered questionnaire with 8 questions. Respondents are asked to rate, on a 4-point scale (0-3), their usual chances of dozing off or falling asleep while engaged in eight different activities. The ESS score (the sum of 8 item scores, 0-3) can range from 0 to 24. The higher the ESS score, the higher that person's average sleep propensity in daily life.
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
UCSD Sleep Research
🇺🇸La Jolla, California, United States