Smith I, Lasserson T J, Wright J
Papworth Hospital, Respiratory Support and Sleep Centre,Papworth Everard, Cambridge, UK, CB3 8RE.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2006 Apr 19(2):CD003002. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD003002.pub2.
The treatment of choice for moderate to severe obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) is continuous positive airways pressure (CPAP) via a mask during sleep. However this is not tolerated by all patients and its role in mild OSA is not proven. Drug therapy has been proposed as an alternative to CPAP in some patients with mild to moderate sleep apnoea and could be of value in patients intolerant of CPAP. A number of mechanisms have been proposed by which drugs could reduce the severity of OSA. These include an increase in tone in the upper airway dilator muscles, an increase in ventilatory drive, a reduction in the proportion of REM sleep, an increase in cholinergic tone during sleep, a reduction in airway resistance and a reduction in surface tension in the upper airway.
To determine the efficacy of drug therapies in the treatment of sleep apnoea.
We carried out searches on the Cochrane Airways Group Specialised Register of trials. Searches were current as of July 2005.
Randomised, placebo controlled trials involving adult patients with confirmed OSA . We excluded trials if continuous positive airways pressure, mandibular devices or oxygen therapy were used. No restriction was placed upon publication language or trial duration.
Two reviewers independently assessed studies for inclusion, undertook data extraction according to pre-specified entry criteria, and quality assessment of studies. No response for further information was forthcoming from study authors. Results were expressed as mean differences and 95% Confidence Intervals (CI).
Twenty-six trials of 21 drugs, involving 394 participants contributed data to the review. Most of the studies were small and many trials had methodological limitations. Each of the studies states that the subjects had OSA but diagnostic criteria were not always explicit and it is possible that some patients with central apnoeas may have been recruited. Six drugs had some impact on OSA severity and two altered daytime symptoms. One study reported that apnoea hypopnea index (AHI) was lower following treatment with intranasal fluticasone compared with placebo (23.3 versus 30.3) in 24 participants with sleep apnoea and rhinitis. Subjective alertness in the daytime also improved. Physostigmine gave an AHI of 41 compared to 54 on placebo (10 participants) and in a similar study Mirtazipine 15 mg produced an AHI of 13 compared to 23.7 for placebo (10 participants). Topical nasal lubricant given twice overnight resulted in an AHI of 14 compared to 24 with placebo (10 participants). These three latter studies were of single night crossover design and so there are no data on the acceptability of these treatments or their effect on symptoms. Paroxetine was shown to reduce AHI to 23.3 compared to 30.3 for placebo, most of the 20 participants tolerated the treatment but there was no improvement in daytime symptoms. Acetazolamide also reduced the AHI (one crossover trial of nine patients, mean difference 24 (95% CI 4 to 44). However there was no symptomatic benefit from the drug and it was poorly tolerated in the long term. Protriptyline led to a symptomatic improvement (improved versus not improved) in two out of three crossover trials (13 participants, Peto Odds Ratio 29.2 (95% CI 2.8 to 301.1) but there was no change in the apnoea frequency. In one trial naltrexone did reduce AHI, but total sleep time favoured placebo. No significant beneficial effects were found for medroxy progesterone, clonidine, mibefradil, cilazapril, buspirone, aminophylline, theophylline doxapram, ondansetron or sabeluzole.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: There is insufficient evidence to recommend the use of drug therapy in the treatment of OSA. Small studies have reported positive effects of certain agents on short-term outcome. Certain agents have been shown to reduce the AHI in largely unselected populations with OSA by between 24 and 45%. For fluticasone, mirtazipine, physostigmine and nasal lubricant, studies of longer duration are required to establish whether this has an impact on daytime symptoms. Individual patients had more complete responses to particular drugs. It is likely that better matching of drugs to patients according to the dominant mechanism of their OSA will lead to better results and this also needs further study.
中重度阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停(OSA)的首选治疗方法是在睡眠期间通过面罩进行持续气道正压通气(CPAP)。然而,并非所有患者都能耐受,且其在轻度OSA中的作用尚未得到证实。在一些轻度至中度睡眠呼吸暂停患者中,药物治疗已被提议作为CPAP的替代方法,对于不耐受CPAP的患者可能具有价值。已经提出了多种药物可减轻OSA严重程度的机制。这些机制包括增加上气道扩张肌的张力、增加通气驱动力、减少快速眼动睡眠比例、增加睡眠期间的胆碱能张力、降低气道阻力以及降低上气道表面张力。
确定药物治疗对睡眠呼吸暂停的疗效。
我们对Cochrane气道组专业试验注册库进行了检索。检索截至2005年7月。
涉及确诊OSA成年患者的随机、安慰剂对照试验。如果使用了持续气道正压通气、下颌装置或氧疗,我们将排除该试验。对发表语言或试验持续时间没有限制。
两名综述作者独立评估纳入研究,根据预先设定的纳入标准进行数据提取,并对研究进行质量评估。未收到研究作者提供的进一步信息回复。结果以平均差值和95%置信区间(CI)表示。
21种药物的26项试验,涉及394名参与者为该综述提供了数据。大多数研究规模较小,许多试验存在方法学局限性。每项研究均表明受试者患有OSA,但诊断标准并不总是明确,可能招募了一些中枢性呼吸暂停患者。六种药物对OSA严重程度有一定影响,两种药物改变了日间症状。一项研究报告称,24名患有睡眠呼吸暂停和鼻炎的参与者经鼻内氟替卡松治疗后,与安慰剂相比,呼吸暂停低通气指数(AHI)较低(分别为23.3和30.3)。日间主观警觉性也有所改善。毒扁豆碱治疗组的AHI为41,安慰剂组为54(10名参与者),在一项类似研究中,米氮平15mg治疗组的AHI为13,安慰剂组为23.7(10名参与者)。夜间给予两次局部鼻润滑剂,与安慰剂相比,AHI为14(安慰剂组为24)(10名参与者)。后三项研究为单夜交叉设计,因此没有关于这些治疗的可接受性或其对症状影响的数据。帕罗西汀治疗组的AHI降至23.3,安慰剂组为30.3,20名参与者中的大多数耐受该治疗,但日间症状无改善。乙酰唑胺也降低了AHI(9名患者的一项交叉试验,平均差值24(95%CI 4至44)。然而,该药物没有症状改善,长期耐受性较差。普罗替林在三项交叉试验中的两项中导致症状改善(改善与未改善)(13名参与者,Peto比值比29.2(95%CI 2.8至301.1),但呼吸暂停频率无变化。在一项试验中,纳曲酮确实降低了AHI,但总睡眠时间倾向于安慰剂。对于甲羟孕酮、可乐定、米贝拉地尔、西拉普利、丁螺环酮、氨茶碱、茶碱、多沙普仑、昂丹司琼或沙贝鲁唑,未发现显著有益效果。
没有足够证据推荐使用药物治疗OSA。小型研究报告了某些药物对短期结局的积极影响。某些药物已被证明可在很大程度上未选择的OSA人群中将AHI降低24%至45%。对于氟替卡松、米氮平、毒扁豆碱和鼻润滑剂,需要进行更长时间的研究以确定这是否对日间症状有影响。个别患者对特定药物有更完全的反应。根据OSA的主要机制更好地将药物与患者匹配可能会带来更好的结果,这也需要进一步研究。