Influence of Sleep Apnea on Risk of Atrial Fibrillation

NCT ID: NCT02576587

Last Updated: 2018-08-15

Study Results

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Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

COMPLETED

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

317 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2012-01-01

Study Completion Date

2017-02-22

Brief Summary

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The Elucidation of the Influence of Sleep Apnea on Risk of Atrial Fibrillation study.

The study involves a case control design to investigate the extent to which there is an independent relationship of sleep disordered breathing (SDB) and paroxysmal atrial fibrillation (PAF). Cases will be defined as clinically identified patients with PAF and controls as those without AF. In order to rigorously address important biologic confounding influences, the cases and controls will be individually matched based upon age, gender, race, and body mass index. Those participants with both PAF and SDB (Apnea Hypopnea Index, AHI\>=15) will be asked to return for a follow up exam after 3 months of SDB treatment in the Clinical Research Unit (CRU) for collection of the same measures collected at the baseline exam to observe for any significant changes with the purpose of collecting effect size data to inform future clinical trials.

The total duration of the study is 4 years. The duration for any individual participant is up to from one to 13 weeks months, including a 3-month treatment period for those with moderate to severe SDB, i.e. AHI\>15.

Detailed Description

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Sleep-disordered breathing (SDB) is common in patients with cardiovascular disease and its attendant hypoxemia and autonomic dysfunction create a milieu that is likely to enhance AF propensity. Thus, SDB may represent a novel target for AF prevention and treatment strategies. Although our prior cross-sectional work has shown a 2-4 fold higher odds of AF related to SDB, these and other reports have not included cardiac structural data or autonomic/biochemical measures, and have addressed only arrhythmic events occurring during an overnight sleep study. In this proposal, we will examine paroxysmal AF (PAF), an early stage risk factor for persistent AF, and relevant to this proposal because it occurs prior to extensive cardiac electrical remodeling/fibrosis.

OUTLINE OF STUDY VISITS Baseline Visit (SA 1 and 2). After informed consent, eligible participants will be scheduled to arrive for an overnight visit in the CRU. During the evening, participants will undergo questionnaire administration, blood pressure measurements, and anthropometry. They will be provided dinner and undergo polysomnography (PSG). In the morning, participants will undergo fasting venipuncture, overnight urine collection, ECHO, 6 minute walk test, vascular measures and blood pressure measurements. For those with PAF (cases), hook-up for continuous ECG monitoring will be performed along with education regarding how to handle the device and bathing instructions, etc. All measurements in the DCRU/CRU will be performed blinded to PAF status. The only unblinded staff will be a dedicated research assistant who will perform the ECG monitoring hook-up. Blinded staff will collect and process data and perform data entry. After the baseline visit, participants with PAF (n=150) will undergo hook-up of the ECG monitor and an activity monitor at the baseline visit to wear for a 7-21 day period.

Follow-Up Visit (SA3). Those with SDB (AHI\>=15) without evidence of central apnea (central apnea index\>5) or Cheyne Stokes Respirations via baseline visit PSG and who have PAF will undergo the following. A 5-7 day home-based auto-titration (APAP, Respironics Autopap System One with humidifier) to identify the optimal positive airway pressure (PAP) setting will be performed (with settings 4-20cm H2O). At the end of the 5-7 day titration, the goal will be to identify the pressure that results in an AHI\<5 events/hour (optimally). The research assistant will re-set the device to deliver this optimal fixed pressure identified by the PI through the secure wireless web-site. An overnight DCRUCRU visit will be scheduled after 3 months of wearing CPAP during which the same measures performed at the baseline visit will be collected.

STUDY PROCEDURES 2-DIMENSIONAL DOPPLER ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY. Parasternal, apical and subcostal 2-D views and apical 3D views will be obtained with transducer orientation and gain settings adjusted to optimally define endocardial surface of each cardiac chamber.

POLYSOMNOGRAPHY (PSG). Procedure for PSG: Research PSG will be performed using the Compumedics E-series system (Abbottsford, AU) which will include 3 cortical encephalograms, bilateral electro-oculograms, a bipolar submental electromyogram, thoracic and abdominal respiratory inductance plethysmography, airflow (by nasal-oral thermocouple and nasal cannula pressure recording), oximetry (using highly sensitive finger pulse oximeter, sampling frequency 25Hz), electrocardiogram (ECG) at 250Hz (used to derive HRV measures of autonomic function); body position (mercury switch sensor), bilateral leg movements. EEGs are recorded at 125Hz. 3) 7-21 Day CONTINUOUS ECG MONITORING.

Procedure: A 3-lead (2 channel), wireless, lightweight ECG monitoring device will be used to collect the ECG data over a 7-21 day period in those with PAF after the baseline and follow-up CRU visits.

ACTIVITY MONITORING. Procedure: An accelerometer (GT3X+, Actigraph Co., Ft Walton Bch, Fl) will be used for 7-21 days, coincident with the time of continuous ECG monitoring.

FASTING VENIPUNCTURE (52cc). Procedure: Phlebotomy will be performed the morning of the baseline and follow-up visits using standard techniques by trained research staff following written procedures. 6) DNA collection. Blood will be collected to extract RNA, which will be stored to test future hypotheses regarding genetic determinants of treatment response.

OVERNIGHT URINE. Procedure: Overnight urine collection will be performed. ANTHROPOMETRY. Height (inches, cm), neck circumference (cm), waist circumference (cm), hip circumference (cm) will be obtained. Skinfolds are measured with calibrated metal calipers from 7 sites (chest, calf, thigh, calf, subscapular, midaxillary, suprailiac, abdominal).

RESTING BLOOD PRESSURE (BP). BP will be measured after the participant has been sitting quietly for at least 5 minutes following standardized guidelines using a calibrated sphygmomanometer. Measurements will be repeated three times and recorded.

QUESTIONNAIRES. The following will be collected: a) The Berlin Sleep Questionnaire, b) Epworth Sleepiness Scale, c) The Sleep Habits and Medical Condition Questionnaire d) The Medical Outcomes Survey-SF 36 (MOS-SF) e) Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9) f) Daily ECG/Activity Log g) Atrial Fibrillation Effect on Quality-of-life, a 20-item questionnaire that assesses the impact of atrial fibrillation on quality of life.

6 Minute Walk Test. Baseline oxygen saturation and heart rate will be recorded. If oxygen saturation \>90%, then proceed with protocol. Using the BORG Scale record rate the symptoms of breathlessness and leg fatigue after a 6 minute walk at usual pace.

Arterial Applanation Tonometry: Radial artery measurements will be performed after sphygmomanometric pressure is obtained with use of an applanation tonometry probe with a minimum of two consecutive measurements to obtain pulse wave analysis results. For pulse wave velocity, lead II ECG will be performed along with cardotid and femoral applanation tomometry.

Conditions

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Sleep Apnea Atrial Fibrillation

Study Design

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Allocation Method

NON_RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

SINGLE_GROUP

Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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Case (diagnosed with PAF)

Cases. Patients with Paroxysmal Atrial Fibrillation who present to Electrophysiology Clinic at UHCMC and the Cleveland Clinic Foundation will be approached for recruitment in the study.

Cases found to have an apnea hypopnea index \>=15 will be asked to continue in the study for 3 months wearing a Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP) machine.

Group Type OTHER

Continuous Positive Airway Pressure

Intervention Type OTHER

For cases, those found to have moderate sleep apnea (AHI \>=15) will be place on CPAP therapy.

Controls

Controls. Patients without AF will be recruited from General Cardiology and Internal Medicine clinics (geographically similar to controls). Selection bias will be minimized as there are a broad range of reasons for patients to present to these clinics.

Group Type NO_INTERVENTION

No interventions assigned to this group

Interventions

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Continuous Positive Airway Pressure

For cases, those found to have moderate sleep apnea (AHI \>=15) will be place on CPAP therapy.

Intervention Type OTHER

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

PAF defined by recurrent episodes of AF, which self-terminate within a 7-day period (based upon AHA consensus statement 77)

Age 18-80 years

Individuals able to participate in \> 2 overnight/daytime sleep and physiologic assessments over a 3 month period.


Age 18 to 80 years

Individuals in normal sinus rhythm (NSR) with no current AF or history of AF

Individuals able to participate in an overnight/daytime sleep and physiologic assessment.

Exclusion Criteria

PAF with rapid or uncontrolled rate (\>120bpm)

Post-operative PAF

History of cardiac ablation or successful electro-cardioversion for PAF (ablation for other arrhythmias such as AVNRT and if PAF persists after cardioversion is acceptable )

Valvular stenosis, prosthesis or significant valvular insufficiency \[i.e. those with moderate or greater severity of aortic stenosis (aortic valve area \<1.5 cm2), mitral regurgitation which is moderate or more severe in degree (\>20% regurgitant fraction) or moderate or greater severity mitral stenosis (mitral valve area \<1.5 cm2)\]

Atrial septal defect

Infiltrative/restrictive cardiomyopathy

Sick sinus syndrome

Previously diagnosed SDB on specific SDB treatments (CPAP, oral appliances)

Severe chronic insomnia

Circadian rhythm disorder (e.g. shift work sleep disorder, delayed or advanced sleep phase syndrome)

Insufficient sleep syndrome defined by reported sleep duration \< 4 hrs

Supplemental oxygen use

Unstable medical conditions (e.g., new onset or changing angina, a myocardial infarction or congestive heart failure exacerbation documented within the previous 3 months, systolic heart failure (Left Ventricular Ejection Fraction \< 35%), high grade cardiac dysrhythmia/heart block, stroke with functional limitations, uncontrolled hypertension (BP\>170/110), abdominal aneurysm \>5.5 cm or \>1 cm growth/year, uncontrolled diabetes mellitus (HbA1c\>9.0), pulmonary hypertension, non-skin cancer diagnosis or treatment within the previous year, end stage renal and hepatic failure, immunodeficiencies (HIV, HCV), uncontrolled hypo- or hyperthyroidism)

Psychiatric disorders which are inadequately treated

Compromised competence

Alcohol abuse (currently drinks \>5 alcoholic drinks/day)

Pregnancy

Inability to provide informed consent

Illicit drug use over last 6 months

Rate controlling anti-arrhythmic medication (Classes I-III and V) with no further clinical occurrence of PAF

Has a Pacemaker or Implantable cardioverter-defibrillator.

Rationale for criteria: The goal of this study is to include those patients with PAF that is not secondary to the post-operative period or valvular disease and without ablation as these processes would result in alteration of atrial physiology and preclude assessment of independent SDB effects on AF which is independent of these conditions. Patients with sleep disorders will be excluded as sleep disorders may influence arrhythmogenesis. Those on treatment for SDB will be excluded because treatment would preclude assessment of SDB pathophysiologic effects on atrial arrhythmogenesis. Those with unstable medical conditions or rapid or uncontrolled heart rate will be excluded due to safety reasons.
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Maximum Eligible Age

80 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Sponsors

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National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)

NIH

Sponsor Role collaborator

The Cleveland Clinic

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Reena Mehra, MD

Director of Sleep Disorders Reseach, Associate Professor of Medicine

Responsibility Role PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Principal Investigators

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Reena Mehra, MD

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

The Cleveland Clinic

Locations

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Cleveland Clinic

Cleveland, Ohio, United States

Site Status

Countries

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United States

References

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May AM, Wang L, Kwon DH, Van Wagoner DR, Chung MK, Dalton JE, Mehra R. Sleep apnea screening instrument evaluation and novel model development and validation in the paroxysmal atrial fibrillation population. Int J Cardiol Heart Vasc. 2020 Sep 4;31:100624. doi: 10.1016/j.ijcha.2020.100624. eCollection 2020 Dec.

Reference Type DERIVED
PMID: 33364332 (View on PubMed)

Provided Documents

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Document Type: Study Protocol and Statistical Analysis Plan

View Document

Other Identifiers

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R01HL109493

Identifier Type: NIH

Identifier Source: secondary_id

View Link

13-594

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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