Conference Coverage

Emerging CPAP options show sustained benefits


 

REPORTING FROM SLEEP 2018

Upper airway stimulation

Upper airway stimulation (UAS) is emerging as a new class of therapy, said Patrick J. Strollo Jr., MD, of the University of Pittsburgh. The therapy involves an impulse generator (IPG) similar to a pacemaker that is implanted in the left side of the chest and connected to a stimulation lead secured to the distal hypoglossal nerve in the neck. The UAS system also incorporates a sensing lead that is implanted between the intercostal muscles and attached to the IPG allowing for phasic stimulation of the genioglossal muscle. The patient uses a remote control to turn the device on at night and off in the morning.

Dr. Patrick J. Strollo Jr. of the University of Pittsburgh

Dr. Patrick J. Strollo Jr.

Dr. Strollo was lead author of the Stimulation Therapy for Apnea Reduction (STAR) trial (N Engl J Med. 2014:370;139-49), a prospective multicenter trial with a randomized therapy withdrawal arm. In 126 participants, he said, the median AHI score declined 68% in 12 months, from 29.3 at baseline to 9 (P less than .0001).

He provided updated results that showed 80% of patients continued to use the device after 5 years (Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 2018; doi: 10.1177/0194599818762383). Median AHI at 5 years was 6.9, Dr. Strollo said, and median Epworth Sleepiness Scale scores declined from 11.6 at baseline to 6.9 at 5 years.

Another postapproval study of UAS, the ADHERE registry, has enrolled 348 patients at 10 centers with a goal of 2,500, Dr. Strollo said (Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 2018: doi: 10.1177/0194599818764896). Twelve-month study results have shown reductions in AHI and Epworth Sleepiness Scale scores comparable to previous reports. ADHERE also reported that 92% of patients were satisfied with UAS.

The latest innovation for UAS is the ability to download data from the implant at office visits so the physician can review patient adherence patterns, along with energy levels and settings for sensing and stimulation, Dr. Strollo said.

“Upper airway stimulation is an additional tool in the management of properly selected, at-risk apnea patients who do not accept or adhere to positive pressure therapy,” Dr. Strollo said. “The STAR trial has provided robust evidence that upper airway stimulation is safe and effective in participants with moderate to severe OSA, and the treatment effect is maintained beyond the 12-month endpoint.”

Dr. Strollo disclosed a financial relationship with Inspire Medical Systems, manufacturer of the UAS device.

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