The Effects of Successful OSA Treatment on Memory and AD Biomarkers in Older Adults Study

Last updated: September 4, 2024
Sponsor: California Pacific Medical Center Research Institute
Overall Status: Active - Recruiting

Phase

N/A

Condition

Sleep Apnea Syndromes

Mild Cognitive Impairment

Dementia

Treatment

Positive airway pressure

Oral appliance therapy

Positional therapy

Clinical Study ID

NCT05988385
AG080609
  • Ages 55-75
  • All Genders

Study Summary

The Effects of Successful OSA TreatmENT on Memory and AD BIomarkers in Older AduLts (ESSENTIAL) study is a 5-year, multicenter randomized open-label trial that will screen 400 cognitively normal older adults recruited from well-established sleep clinics at 4 academic medical centers, with newly diagnosed moderate-severe OSA. An expected 200 OSA patients will be then randomized to one of two groups: i) a 3-month OSA treatment by any combination of PAP, OAT, and positional therapy that results in an "effective" AHI4%< 10/hour and AHI3A<20/hour (see below); ii) a waitlist control group to receive treatment at the conclusion of the 3-month intervention period. Both groups will continue follow-up for 24 months on stable therapy to determine if sustained improvements in sleep are associated with improvement in cognitive function and AD biomarkers.

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Cognitively normal (TiCS>29

  • Moderate - severe OSA defined as AHI4 ≥20 events/hour or AHI3A>40/hr using ahypopnea criterion of a 4% oxygen desaturation (AHI4) or 3% oxygen desaturationand/or EEG arousal (AHI3A), or equivalent based on in-home testing - Testing musthave been completed in past 12 months or confirmed by repeat test)

  • Not currently on therapy for OSA and has not received treatment for OSA for at least 12 months

  • Able and willing to be treated for OSA

  • Fluency in English or Spanish

Exclusion

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Documented diagnosis of chronic insomnia.

  • Severe or very severe difficulty falling asleep.

  • Documented diagnosis of circadian rhythm disorder.

  • Any current use of supplemental oxygen.

  • Other sleep-related breathing disorders (central sleep apnea, etc) based on AASMcriteria

  • Current shift work involving night shift (regular work between 12am and 6am or nightshift) within the past 6 mo

  • Chronic regular (> 2 nights per week) use of any sedative, stimulant, neurolepticdrugs, or other medications limiting validity of cognitive tests. This includesregular use of alcohol or cannabis for sleep. Melatonin is ok.

  • Diagnosis of uncontrolled psychiatric disease in the last six months , and/orhistory of schizophrenia or bipolar disorder. Controlled conditions will includemajor depressive disorder, panic disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, OCD,substance use disorders, and alcohol abuse/dependence. (medical record/EHR).Personality disorders and neurodevelopmental disorders (e.g. autism, ADHD) areallowed if cognition is within normal limits.

  • Taking methylphenidate for ADHD.

  • Presence of other critical comorbid conditions that would lead to inability tocomplete the study protocol (including follow-up for 2 years), or that would affectcognition (e.g.

clinically relevant endocrine or hematological conditions).

  • Does not have a regular sleeping environment (i.e., sleeps in a different setting > 2 nights per week).

  • Currently pregnant or planning to become pregnant.

  • Prior diagnosis of a Central nervous system (CNS) disease, such as multiplesclerosis, stroke, Parkinson's disease, Alzheimer's disease, epilepsy, a loss ofconsciousness > 24 hours, or traumatic brain injury as identified by the CumulativeIllness Rating Scale for Geriatrics (CIRS). Participants who are diagnosed with MCIor Alzheimer's disease based on neuropsychological testing will be excluded.Delirium in the last 12 months.

  • Near-miss or prior automobile accident "due to sleepiness" within the past 12months.

  • Employed as a commercial driver during the study (for example, bus drivers, trainengineers, airplane pilots).

Study Design

Total Participants: 200
Treatment Group(s): 3
Primary Treatment: Positive airway pressure
Phase:
Study Start date:
April 22, 2024
Estimated Completion Date:
May 31, 2028

Study Description

The prevalence of Alzheimer disease (AD) is high and projected to increase. While there are multiple risk factors for AD, epidemiological data suggests that ~15% of AD risk may be attributed to sleep problems. Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is common among the elderly (30-55%), and the investigators have shown that cognitively normal older women with OSA have nearly double the risk of developing mild cognitive impairment (MCI) or dementia over 5 years. Further, the investigators have shown that in normal elderly, OSA predicts longitudinal increases in AD biomarkers. Our preliminary data also show that after positive airway pressure (PAP) withdrawal, OSA patients treated with PAP experienced significant overnight increases in plasma neurofilament light (NfL), a marker of neural injury. The present study is designed to overcome challenges identified in previous trials of treatment of OSA to slow cognitive decline and progression to AD. First, the most effective treatment for OSA, PAP therapy, has poor adherence (typically only 50% are adequately treated). Other common therapies include oral appliance therapy (OAT) which tends to be better tolerated but less effective. The investigators have piloted and propose for this study a rapid multimodal therapy initiation (RMMT) which ensures subjects will have effective therapy for their OSA that reduces OSA severity to AHI4%<10/hour and AHI3A (AKA pRDI) < 20/hour within 4 months. Second, most prior OSA treatment trials have focused primarily on symptomatic older adults (e.g. patients with MCI recruited from memory clinics), whereas early intervention in pre-symptomatic individuals may have stronger impact in preventing progression to AD. The investigators propose to enroll cognitively normal adults with newly diagnosed moderate-severe OSA (AHI4% >20/hour or AHI3A > 40/hour). Finally, selection of cognitive outcomes most responsive to OSA therapy has proved challenging. The Effects of Successful OSA TreatmENT on Memory and AD BIomarkers in Older AduLts (ESSENTIAL) study is a 5-year, multicenter randomized open-label trial that will screen 400 cognitively normal older adults (MoCA≥24, Clinical Dementia Rating [CDR]=0), ages 55-75, recruited from well-established sleep clinics at 4 academic medical centers, with newly diagnosed moderate-severe OSA (AHI4% >20/hour or AHI3A > 40/hour). An expected 200 OSA patients will be then randomized to one of two groups: i) a 3-month OSA treatment by any combination of PAP, OAT, and positional therapy that results in an "effective" AHI4%< 10/hour and AHI3A<20/hour (see below); ii) a waitlist control group to receive treatment at the conclusion of the 3-month intervention period. Both groups will continue follow-up for 24 months on stable therapy to determine if sustained improvements in sleep are associated with improvement in cognitive function and AD biomarkers. Both arms will include PSG and actigraphy, sleep-dependent memory and other cognitive evaluations, and blood draws at baseline, 3 and 24 months, with cognitive evaluation only at 12 months. Structural brain MRI will be performed at baseline. Because the investigators anticipate that 150 of 200 subjects will be well treated at 24 months, and 50 will not be, the investigators will additionally recruit ~50 subjects (on average 13 subjects per clinical site) with the same inclusion criteria who refuse treatment. These 50 subjects will perform baseline (blood draw and cognitive evaluations), 12-month (cognitive evaluation only), and 24-month (blood draw and cognitive evaluations) visits, allowing for a 24-month comparison of ~150 subjects with adequate treatment over 24 months to 100 subjects with inadequate treatment over 24 months. Our aims are: 1) To compare 3-month change in plasma AD biomarkers (NfL, p-tau, Aβ) in those randomized to OSA treatment and wait-list control groups (via both intention-to-treat and per-protocol analyses); 2) To test differences at 3 months in sleep-dependent declarative memory and cognitive scores (PACC and sub-domains) between the OSA treatment and wait-list control groups (via both intention-to-treat and per-protocol analyses); 3) To compare 24-month changes in AD biomarkers (NfL, p-tau, Aβ) and cognition in all successfully treated subjects and untreated controls.

Connect with a study center

  • University of Arizona

    Tucson, Arizona 85719
    United States

    Site Not Available

  • Mount Sinai

    New York, New York 10023
    United States

    Site Not Available

  • New York University

    New York, New York 10016
    United States

    Active - Recruiting

  • University of Pittsburgh

    Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15213
    United States

    Site Not Available

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