| Literature DB >> 31119695 |
John R Wheatley1,2, Terence C Amis3,4, Sharon A Lee3,4, Renee Ciesla5, Gilbert Shanga5.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: This exploratory study characterized the performance of a nasal dilator strip with improved spring forces in lowering nasal resistance during sleep and reducing sleep-disordered breathing in subjects with difficulty sleeping due to chronic nocturnal nasal congestion.Entities:
Keywords: Breathe Right nasal strips; Nasal congestion; Nasal dilators; Nasal resistance; Sleep; Snoring
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31119695 PMCID: PMC6822853 DOI: 10.1007/s12325-019-00980-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Ther ISSN: 0741-238X Impact factor: 3.845
Fig. 1Subject disposition. AE, adverse event
Demographics and baseline sleep characteristics
| Demographics | ITT population ( |
|---|---|
| Age, years | |
| Mean (SD) | 48.5 (14.7) |
| Median (range) | 50.0 (20–77) |
| Sex, | |
| Male | 47 (66.2) |
| Female | 24 (33.8) |
| Race, | |
| White | 59 (83.1) |
| Black | 0 |
| Asian | 3 (4.2) |
| Other | 9 (12.7) |
| BMI, kg/m2 | |
| Mean (SD) | 28.7 (5.2) |
| Median (range) | 27.8 (17.5–43.6) |
| Neck circumference, cm | |
| Mean (SD) | 39.1 (3.9) |
| Median (range) | 39.0 (29.5–49.5) |
SD standard deviation
Nocturnal nasal airflow resistance results during the nasal resistance phase (ITT population) (n = 55)
| At flow rate of 0.2 l/s | At flow rates of 0.2 and 0.25 l/sa | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Median (range) resistance, cmH2O/l/s |
| Median (range) resistance, cmH2O/l/s | |
| Awake seated | ||||
| Night without the strip | 22 | 1.34 (0.12–7.36) | 32 | 1.08 (0.12–7.36) |
| Night with the strip | 21 | 1.33 (0.29–14.73) | 33 | 1.13 (0.18–14.73) |
| Awake supine | ||||
| Night without the strip | 22 | 1.82 (0.12–14.09) | 33 | 1.50 (0.12–14.09) |
| Night with the strip | 22 | 1.35 (0.33–8.57) | 32 | 1.06 (0.32–8.57) |
| Asleep supine | ||||
| Night without the strip | 21 | 2.22 (0.30–14.31) | 36 | 2.20 (0.30–14.31) |
| Night with the strip | 22 | 1.74 (0.32–13.26) | 37 | 1.34 (0.20–13.26)b |
aPost hoc analysis (see “Methods”)
bP < 0.05 for night with the strip vs. night without the strip (statistical comparisons were made only for asleep supine). P values were computed from mixed models with treatment and period as fixed effects, subjects as random effects, and time as repeated measures effect
Lower resistance is better
ITT intent to treat, SD standard deviation
Fig. 2Group mean nasal resistance at flow rates of 0.2 and 0.25 l/s over time during the night, nasal resistance phase (ITT population) (n = 55a). aOnly 55 subjects entered the nasal resistance phase, and only subjects with data for both strip and no strip were used for the group means. ITT intent to treat, SD standard deviation
Snoring and breathing route results during the active phase and nasal resistance phase (ITT population)
| Median (range) snoring/breathing results | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PSG night 1 (baseline) ( | Active phase | Nasal resistance phase | |||
| PSG night 8 ( | PSG night 29 ( | No strip ( | Strip ( | ||
| Snores/h, | 278.9 (19.3–854.3) | 276.8 (16.1–945.1) | 290.6 (18.1–1049.1) | 295.3 (20.0–927.9) | 300.8 (56.9–867.4) |
| Snoring proportion of sleep time, % | 38.7 (0.1–98.4) | 36.9 (0.2–93.2) | 39.8 (0.1–99.3) | 37.8 (0.7–97.3) | 44.0 (4.7–97.6) |
| Snore sound intensity, dB | 39.4 (25.9–62.1) | 42.0 (24.2–54.6) | 43.2 (34.7–62.2) | 42.9 (34.2–56.2) | 43.0 (34.9–59.3) |
| Peak snore sound intensity, dB | 66.5 (45.4–97.2) | 67.6 (43.7–87.0) | 69.7 (50.4–99.1) | 71.3 (4.2–92.0) | 69.1 (35.0–93.5) |
| Nasal breathing route, % | 14.9 (0.0–99.8) | 19.2 (0.0–99.1) | 21.4 (0.0–100.0) | 43.3 (1.2–99.0) | 47.8 (0.6–100.0) |
| Oronasal breathing route, % | 84.5 (0.0–100.0) | 79.3 (0.9–100.0) | 72.3 (0.0–100.0) | 51.9 (0.0–97.4) | 49.4 (0.0–97.2) |
dB decibels, ITT intent to treat, PSG polysomnography
Polysomnography results at baseline and during the active phase (ITT population)
| Median (range) PSG result | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| PSG night 1 (baseline) ( | PSG night 8 ( | PSG night 29 ( | |
| Total sleep time, min | 372.5 (228.0–496.0) | 370.0 (230.0–509.0) | 375.0 (181.0–501.0) |
| Sleep onset latency, min | 9.0 (0.0–125.0) | 11.0 (0.0–94.0) | 8.0 (0.0–36.0) |
| REM latency, min | 80.5 (3.0–254.0) | 76.5 (6.0–269.0) | 72.0 (7.0–284.0) |
| Total non-REM sleep, min | 295.5 (191.0–391.0) | 298.0 (183.0–391.0) | 295.0 (148.0–376.0) |
| Total REM sleep, min | 72.0 (36.0–119.0) | 75.5 (32.0–135.0) | 77.0 (29.0–145.0) |
| Wake after sleep onset, min | 57.5 (4.0–212.0) | 48.5 (6.0–186.0) | 41.0 (7.0–237.0) |
| Sleep efficiency, % | 82.7 (51.0–95.8) | 84.1 (54.7–97.6) | 85.2 (39.2–95.9) |
| Sleep architecture, % | |||
| N1 | 7.5 (1.0–23.0) | 6.5 (1.0–20.0) | 7.0 (1.0–27.0) |
| N2 | 48.0 (32.0–67.0) | 47.0 (30.0–70.0) | 46.0 (33.0–60.0) |
| N3 | 22.0 (4.0–40.0) | 22.0 (3.0–40.0) | 23.0 (2.0–35.0) |
| Arousals per hour | |||
| Total arousals | 21.6 (8.0–64.3) | 23.9 (5.4–54.1) | 22.1 (7.6–60.3) |
| Respiratory arousals | 1.4 (0.0–21.5) | 1.1 (0.0–22.4) | 1.2 (0.0–40.9) |
| Spontaneous arousals | 6.7 (1.0–34.6) | 3.8 (0.5–18.2) | 4.2 (1.4–17.5) |
| RERA | 12.4 (2.2–41.5) | 15.1 (1.9–49.2) | 13.6 (2.3–48.9) |
| Leg movement arousals | 0.0 (0.0–6.7) | 0.0 (0.0–9.7) | 0.0 (0.0–3.7) |
| RDI, events/h | 16.7 (2.9–65.6) | 20.3 (0.7–51.8) | 17.8 (2.8–62.2) |
| AHI, events/h | 2.0 (0.0–24.3) | 1.8 (0.0–24.5) | 1.9 (0.0–43.1) |
| Oxygen saturation, % | ( | ( | ( |
| Lowest SaO2 in REM | 92.0 (82.0–97.0) | 92.0 (77.0–96.0) | 91.0 (82.0–98.0) |
| Lowest SaO2 in non-REM | 92.0 (82.0–96.0) | 91.0 (72.0–96.0) | 91.0 (79.0–97.0) |
| Mean SaO2 in sleep | 96.0 (91.0–99.0) | 96.0 (90.0–98.0) | 95.0 (92.0–99.0) |
| Desaturations, events/h | ( | ( | ( |
| ≥ 3% | 1.8 (0.0–35.3) | 1.6 (0.0–29.4) | 2.3 (0.0–41.6) |
AHI apnea/hypopnea index, ITT intent to treat, PSG polysomnography, RDI respiratory disturbance index, REM rapid eye movement, RERA respiratory effort-related arousal, SaO blood oxygen saturation
Global self-assessments of the nasal dilator strip during active phase compared with before study participation (ITT population)
| Mean (SD) global assessmenta ( | ||
|---|---|---|
| Ease of breathing | 1.4 (0.7) | < 0.0001 |
| Falling asleep | 0.6 (0.8) | < 0.0001 |
| Staying asleep | 0.8 (0.8) | < 0.0001 |
| Number of awakenings | 0.7 (0.8) | < 0.0001 |
| Falling back to sleep | 0.7 (0.8) | < 0.0001 |
| Waking up too early | 0.3 (0.6) | 0.0019 |
| Sleep depth | 0.7 (0.7) | < 0.0001 |
| Sleep quality | 0.9 (0.7) | < 0.0001 |
| Nocturia | 0.3 (0.6) | 0.0012 |
| Dry mouth upon awakening | 0.6 (0.8) | < 0.0001 |
| Morning headache | 0.4 (0.7) | < 0.0001 |
| Feeling refreshed in the morning | 0.8 (0.8) | < 0.0001 |
aScale: − 2 = much worse; − 1 = somewhat worse; 0 = no change, 1 = somewhat improved; 2 = much improved relative to before study participation
bP values are from a one-sample t test using SAS UNIVARIATE (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC, USA)
ITT intent to treat, SD standard deviation
Subjective measures: Epworth Sleepiness Scale and Functional Outcomes of Sleep Questionnaire, active phase (ITT population)
| Mean (SD) baseline score, au ( | Mean (SD) score after 28 days of treatment, au ( | Mean (%) change from baselinea | |
|---|---|---|---|
| ESS | 8.6 (4.4) | 7.4 (4.6) | − 0.85 (− 10.0)a,b |
| FOSQ, total score | 17.6 (2.0) | 17.55 (2.13) | − 0.056 (− 0.32) |
aCalculated for subjects who had both baseline and postbaseline assessments
bP = 0.036 versus baseline; one-sample t test was done on differences
au arbitrary units, ESS Epworth Sleepiness Scale, FOSQ Functional Outcomes of Sleep Questionnaire, ITT intent to treat, SD standard deviation