| Literature DB >> 26022945 |
Miguel Ángel Martínez-García1, Eusebi Chiner2, Luis Hernández3, Jose Pascual Cortes4, Pablo Catalán5, Silvia Ponce6, Jose Ramón Diaz7, Ester Pastor8, Laura Vigil9, Carmen Carmona10, Josep Maria Montserrat11, Felipe Aizpuru12, Patricia Lloberes13, Mercedes Mayos14, Maria José Selma15, Jose Fernando Cifuentes15, Alvaro Muñoz15.
Abstract
Almost all the information about the effect of continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) in patients with obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) comes from clinical trials involving only middle-aged patients. The objective of this study was to assess the effect of CPAP treatment in elderly patients with severe OSA on clinical, quality-of-life and neurocognitive spheres. We performed an open-label, randomised, multicentre clinical trial in a consecutive clinical cohort of 224 elderly (≥70 years old) patients with confirmed severe OSA (apnoea-hypopnea index ≥30) randomised to receive CPAP (n=115) or no CPAP (n=109) for 3 months. A sleep study was performed by either full polysomnography or respiratory polygraphy. CPAP titration was performed by an autoCPAP device. The primary endpoint was quality of life (Quebec Sleep Questionnaire) and secondary endpoints included sleep-related symptoms, presence of anxiety/depression, office-based blood pressure and some neurocognitive tests. The mean±sd age was 75.5±3.9 years. The CPAP group achieved a greater improvement in all quality-of-life domains (p<0.001; effect size: 0.41-0.98), sleep-related symptoms (p<0.001; effect size 0.31-0.91) as well as anxiety (p=0.016; effect size 0.51) and depression (p<0.001; effect size: 0.28) indexes and some neurocognitive tests (digit symbol test (p=0.047; effect size: 0.20) and Trail Making Test A (p=0.029; effect size: 0.44)) in an intention-to-treat analysis. In conclusion, CPAP treatment resulted in an improvement in quality of life, sleep-related symptoms, anxiety and depression indexes and some neurocognitive aspects in elderly people with severe OSA.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26022945 DOI: 10.1183/09031936.00064214
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Respir J ISSN: 0903-1936 Impact factor: 16.671