W A Bardwell1, S Ancoli-Israel, C C Berry, J E Dimsdale. 1. University of California, San Diego, Department of Psychiatry, and Veterans Affairs San Diego Healthcare System, La Jolla 92093-0804, USA. wabardwell@ucsd.edu
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To determine whether 1-week continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) treatment, compared with placebo CPAP, improves cognitive functioning in patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). METHODS:36 OSA patients (aged 32-60 years, respiratory disturbance index [RDI] > 15) were monitored 2 nights with polysomnography, then randomized for 1-week treatment to CPAP or placebo (CPAP at 2 cm H2O with holes in mask). Participants completed Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale-Revised Digit Symbol and Digit Span, Trailmaking A/B, Digit Vigilance, Stroop Color-Word, Digit Ordering, and Word Fluency tests pre- and posttreatment. These produced 22 scores per participant, which were analyzed by use of repeated-measures analysis of variance (ANOVA) and a rank-sum test. RESULTS: In ANOVA, only 1 of the 22 scores showed significant changes specific to CPAP treatment, a number that could be expected by chance alone: Digit Vigilance-Time (p = .035). The CPAP group improved their time (from 7.5 to 6.9 minutes. p = .013). The rank-sum test revealed that the CPAP group had significantly better overall cognitive functioning posttreatment than the placebo group (mean ranks of 17.8 vs. 20.2, respectively; p = .022). CONCLUSIONS: Although results suggest overall cognitive improvement due to CPAP, no beneficial effects in any specific cognitive domain were found. Future studies of neuropsychological effects of CPAP treatment should include a placebo CPAP control group. Placebo studies that use longer-term treatment might demonstrate additional effects. It is also possible that, even at 2 cm H2O, CPAP conveys some beneficial neuropsychological effects.
RCT Entities:
OBJECTIVE: To determine whether 1-week continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) treatment, compared with placebo CPAP, improves cognitive functioning in patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). METHODS: 36 OSA patients (aged 32-60 years, respiratory disturbance index [RDI] > 15) were monitored 2 nights with polysomnography, then randomized for 1-week treatment to CPAP or placebo (CPAP at 2 cm H2O with holes in mask). Participants completed Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale-Revised Digit Symbol and Digit Span, Trailmaking A/B, Digit Vigilance, Stroop Color-Word, Digit Ordering, and Word Fluency tests pre- and posttreatment. These produced 22 scores per participant, which were analyzed by use of repeated-measures analysis of variance (ANOVA) and a rank-sum test. RESULTS: In ANOVA, only 1 of the 22 scores showed significant changes specific to CPAP treatment, a number that could be expected by chance alone: Digit Vigilance-Time (p = .035). The CPAP group improved their time (from 7.5 to 6.9 minutes. p = .013). The rank-sum test revealed that the CPAP group had significantly better overall cognitive functioning posttreatment than the placebo group (mean ranks of 17.8 vs. 20.2, respectively; p = .022). CONCLUSIONS: Although results suggest overall cognitive improvement due to CPAP, no beneficial effects in any specific cognitive domain were found. Future studies of neuropsychological effects of CPAP treatment should include a placebo CPAP control group. Placebo studies that use longer-term treatment might demonstrate additional effects. It is also possible that, even at 2 cm H2O, CPAP conveys some beneficial neuropsychological effects.
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