deltatrials
Completed PHASE4 INTERVENTIONAL 3-arm NCT01038791

Patients-ventilator Interaction During Sleep: Effect of Humidification System

Patients-ventilator Interaction During Sleep: the Role of Humidification. A Pilot Short Term Study

Sponsor: IRCCS Azienda Ospedaliero-Universitaria di Bologna

Updated 7 times since 2017 Last updated: Oct 8, 2014 Started: Dec 31, 2009 Primary completion: Jun 30, 2014 Completion: Jun 30, 2014
This information is for research purposes only and is not medical advice. Consult a healthcare provider before making any medical decision.

Listed as NCT01038791, this PHASE4 trial focuses on Chronic Hypercapnic Respiratory Failure and remains completed. Sponsored by IRCCS Azienda Ospedaliero-Universitaria di Bologna, it has been updated 7 times since 2009, reflecting limited change activity. This study adds to the evidence base for this therapeutic area through structured, versioned documentation.

Study Description(click to expand)

BACKGROUND Non-invasive mechanical ventilation (NIMV), usually delivered during night time, is widely used at home in chronic hypercapnic respiratory, both in patients with COPD and restrictive thoracic diseases (RTD). The aim of chronic NIMV is to improve daytime arterial blood gases, sleep quality decreasing symptoms of hypoventilation (mainly during sleep), quality of life and mood. Scarce data is available about the NIMV compliance at home; poor compliance may reduce the positive effects of mechanical ventilation. Previous data shows that patients enrolled to long-term home ventilation program may drop out early, mainly because of skin irritation, upper airway problems, and air leaks. Studies performed on patients with sleep apnea, receiving CPAP therapy at home, showed that the occurrence of leaks during ventilation can cause the development of mucosal inflammation, nasal congestion and increased nasal airways resistance. On the other hand, the presence or the development of nasal obstruction makes the arise or the worsening of air leaks (the vicious cycle) more reliable. A lack of humidification may increase nasal resistance and nasal symptoms and, therefore, contribute to reduction in compliance. Furthermore, leaks may have significant consequences on inspiratory and expiratory trigger functions, inducing poor patient-ventilator interactions. Indeed, the presence of ineffective...

BACKGROUND Non-invasive mechanical ventilation (NIMV), usually delivered during night time, is widely used at home in chronic hypercapnic respiratory, both in patients with COPD and restrictive thoracic diseases (RTD). The aim of chronic NIMV is to improve daytime arterial blood gases, sleep quality decreasing symptoms of hypoventilation (mainly during sleep), quality of life and mood.

Scarce data is available about the NIMV compliance at home; poor compliance may reduce the positive effects of mechanical ventilation. Previous data shows that patients enrolled to long-term home ventilation program may drop out early, mainly because of skin irritation, upper airway problems, and air leaks.

Studies performed on patients with sleep apnea, receiving CPAP therapy at home, showed that the occurrence of leaks during ventilation can cause the development of mucosal inflammation, nasal congestion and increased nasal airways resistance. On the other hand, the presence or the development of nasal obstruction makes the arise or the worsening of air leaks (the vicious cycle) more reliable.

A lack of humidification may increase nasal resistance and nasal symptoms and, therefore, contribute to reduction in compliance. Furthermore, leaks may have significant consequences on inspiratory and expiratory trigger functions, inducing poor patient-ventilator interactions. Indeed, the presence of ineffective efforts, the most common phenomenon of bad patient-ventilation interactions, is very common in patients receiving long term home ventilation and usually associated with poorer gas exchange during sleep.

At present, little data is available in the medical literature regarding the affects of humidification on NIMV efficacy, sleep quality and upper airway symptoms in patients undergoing nocturnal NIMV.

The aim of the present pilot study is to assess the impact of two humidification systems on sleep quality, NIMV efficacy, patient-ventilator interaction, prevalence of NIMV side effects, compliance to treatment, in a group of stable patients already enrolled in a long-term nocturnal mechanical ventilation program for chronic hypercapnic respiratory failure or sleep hypoventilation.

PATIENTS We plan to enrol 20 patients with chronic respiratory failure or sleep hypoventilation already included in a long-term home non-invasive ventilation program (at least 3 months).

Inclusion criteria Patients in stable conditions (no acute exacerbations in the 4 weeks before enrolment), well adapted to ventilation and without problems with the ventilation mask.

Exclusions criteria Patients with acute respiratory failure, recent exacerbations, severe co-morbidities (i.e. hearth failure, recent stroke etc.) Recent upper airways surgery. Allergic rhinitis, severe nasal stenosis.

STUDY DESIGN

Patients will undergo three consecutive nocturnal polysomnographs. Patients will have a baseline therapy of NIMV without humidification for 1 week. They will then undergo a nocturnal polysomnograph on the last evening of the baseline therapy. Patients will then be randomly assigned to use HH or HME for 1 week and undergo a nocturnal polysomnography on the last evening . The patients will then be assigned to the second method of humidification for 1 week and undergo a third nocturnal polysomnograph on the last evening. The whole evaluation will be performed with the same ventilator (ideally the patient's device) using the patient's mask and with the usual ventilator setting.

Measures

At enrolment:

Lung function test Standard questionnaire about the use and tolerability of NIMV at home Measure of NIMV compliance at home Blood gas analysis during wakefulness (during spontaneous breathing - SB - and during NIMV) The breathing pattern during wakefulness (during SB and NIMV)

Polysomnographic evaluation

Full standard assisted polysomnography with simultaneous recordings of Tidal Volume, Leaks, pressure in mask, respiratory rate, instantaneous minute ventilation.

Analysis of sleep data will be performed according to standard criteria (AASM 2007).

Analysis of breathing pattern and patients-ventilator interaction will be made according to previous published methods (Fanfulla, Tuggey, Techsler etc..).

At the end of the each PSG recording, patients will be asked about their humidification and NIMV tolerance as well as the presence of upper airway symptoms (Nava et al).

Status Flow

~Jan 2017 – ~Jun 2018 · 17 months · monthly snapshotCompleted~Jun 2018 – ~Jan 2021 · 31 months · monthly snapshotCompleted~Jan 2021 – ~Oct 2021 · 9 months · monthly snapshotCompleted~Oct 2021 – ~Jul 2024 · 33 months · monthly snapshotCompleted~Jul 2024 – ~Sep 2024 · 2 months · monthly snapshotCompleted~Sep 2024 – present · 19 months · monthly snapshotCompleted~Jan 2026 – present · 3 months · monthly snapshotCompleted

Change History

7 versions recorded
  1. Jan 2026 — Present [monthly]

    Completed PHASE4

  2. Sep 2024 — Present [monthly]

    Completed PHASE4

  3. Jul 2024 — Sep 2024 [monthly]

    Completed PHASE4

  4. Oct 2021 — Jul 2024 [monthly]

    Completed PHASE4

  5. Jan 2021 — Oct 2021 [monthly]

    Completed PHASE4

Show 2 earlier versions
  1. Jun 2018 — Jan 2021 [monthly]

    Completed PHASE4

  2. Jan 2017 — Jun 2018 [monthly]

    Completed PHASE4

    First recorded

Dec 2009

Trial started

Per CT.gov start date — pre-dates our first snapshot

Eligibility Summary

No eligibility information available.

Contact Information

Sponsor contact:
  • IRCCS Azienda Ospedaliero-Universitaria di Bologna
Data source: IRCCS Azienda Ospedaliero-Universitaria di Bologna

For direct contact, visit the study record on ClinicalTrials.gov .

Study Locations