From the Journals

Which drug best reduces sleepiness in patients with OSA?


 

FROM ANNALS OF INTERNAL MEDICINE

Beneficial adjunctive therapy

Commenting on the findings, Sogol Javaheri, MD, MPH, who was not involved in the research, said that they confirm those of prior studies and are “consistent with what my colleagues and I experience in our clinical practices.”

Dr. Javaheri is associate program director of the sleep medicine fellowship at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and assistant professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, both in Boston.

While sleep medicine specialists are more likely than others to prescribe these medications, “any clinician may use these medications, ideally if they have ruled out other potential reversible causes of EDS,” said Dr. Javaheri. “The medications do not treat the underlying cause, which is why it’s important to use them as an adjunct to conventional therapy that actually treats the underlying sleep disorder and to rule out additional potential causes of sleepiness that are treatable.”

These potential causes might include insufficient sleep (less than 7 hours per night), untreated anemia, and incompletely treated sleep disorders, she explained. In sleep medicine, modafinil is usually the treatment of choice because of its lower cost, but it may reduce the efficacy of hormonal contraception. Solriamfetol, however, does not. “Additionally, I look forward to validation of pitolisant for treatment of EDS in OSA patients, as it is not a controlled substance and may benefit patients with a history of substance abuse or who may be at higher risk of addiction,” said Dr. Javaheri.

The study was conducted without outside funding. Dr. Pitre and Dr. Javaheri report no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Music at bedtime may aid depression-related insomnia
Federal Practitioner
Disordered sleep tied to a marked increase in stroke risk
Federal Practitioner
Bad sleep cuts years off life, but exercise can save us
Federal Practitioner
Sleep disturbances linked to post-COVID dyspnea
Federal Practitioner
Napping and AFib risk: The long and the short of it
Federal Practitioner
Obstructive sleep apnea linked to early cognitive decline
Federal Practitioner
‘Shocking’ data on what’s really in melatonin gummies
Federal Practitioner
Erratic sleep, lack of activity tied to worsening schizophrenia symptoms
Federal Practitioner
CPAP not only solution for sleep apnea
Federal Practitioner
Deep sleep may mitigate the impact of Alzheimer’s pathology
Federal Practitioner