3 World-Renowned Sleep Apnea Experts Present New Benefits of PAP Therapies at ATS 2023
25 Mayo 2023 - 8:00AM
3 World-Renowned Sleep Apnea Experts Present New Benefits of PAP
Therapies at ATS 2023
Renowned medical experts at the American Thoracic Society
International Conference unveiled new evidence that demonstrates
treating obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) with positive airway
pressure (PAP) therapy lowers all-cause mortality for patients. In
addition, a late-breaking abstract showed treating central sleep
apnea (CSA) caused a “significant and clinically relevant
improvement” in their symptoms and quality of life. The studies
were among 24 supported by ResMed (NYSE: RMD, ASX: RMD).
Treating OSA with PAP lowered all-cause mortality in
France, Germany
Two headline studies presented at ATS showed an association
between PAP treatment for OSA and lower all-cause mortality. One is
an analysis of over 22,000 anonymized German patients diagnosed
with OSA – roughly half using PAP, the other not. The study, led
and presented by German sleep researcher Holger Woehrle, concluded
PAP treatment for OSA is associated with a 13% lower mortality in
the first four years of treatment.
The other is an analysis of over 100,000 deidentified French
patients who previously stopped but restarted PAP to treat OSA –
roughly two-thirds were still using PAP one year later, the other
one-third stopped a second time. The study, led and presented by
French sleep researcher Jean-Louis Pépin and part of ResMed’s
broader landmark ALASKA study, found “the risk of all-cause death
was 38% lower in individuals who continued using CPAP after therapy
resumption.”
These studies build on a 2022 ResMed ALASKA study published in
CHEST that found people with OSA who continued PAP over a
three-year period were 39% more likely to survive than those who
didn’t.
Treating CSA with ASV improved quality of life, symptoms
over 1 year
A third major finding came out of READ-ASV, the largest
prospective registry investigating the clinical use and effects of
adaptive-servo ventilation (ASV) in a real-world cohort with
central sleep apnea. Led and presented by German sleep researcher
Michael Arzt, this prospective, multicenter, and multinational
study of 847 patients concluded that first-time ASV users with
central sleep apnea “experienced a significant and clinically
relevant improvement in disease-specific quality of life, daytime
sleepiness, and quality of sleep.”*
“Combined, these studies by globally renowned researchers
emphasize not only the effectiveness of PAP and specifically ASV
therapy for patients who need them, but how better sleep and
breathing is vitally connected to our overall health,” said Carlos
M. Nunez, M.D., ResMed Chief Medical Officer.
An estimated 936 million people worldwide have obstructive sleep
apnea,1 a chronic disease in which throat muscles relax during
sleep, constricting airflow. As a result, the body jolts to awaken
and take a breath, causing dozens to hundreds of sleep
interruptions per night. An estimated 5–10% of all people with
sleep-disordered breathing have central sleep apnea,2 wherein the
brain stops sending signals to the body’s breathing muscles during
sleep, resulting in similar symptoms. All sleep apnea sufferers
often aren’t aware of these waking episodes, and 80% remain
undiagnosed.3
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1 Benjafield AV et al. Lancet Resp Med 20192 Roberts EG at al.
Curr Neurol Neurosci Rep 20223 Young T et al. Sleep 1997* ASV
therapy is contraindicated in patients with chronic, symptomatic
heart failure (NYHA 2-4) with reduced left ventricular ejection
fraction (LVEF ≤45%) and moderate to severe predominant central
sleep apnea.
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