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Vol. 79. (In progress)
(January - December 2024)
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Pharmacological treatment for obstructive sleep apnea: A systematic review and meta-analysis
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Maria Luísa Nobrea, Ayane Cristine Alves Sarmentoa,b, Priscila Farias de Oliveirac, Felipe Ferreira Wanderleyd, José Diniz Júniorc, Ana Katherine Gonçalvesa,e,
Corresponding author
a Programa de Pós-Graduação em Ciências da Saúde, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte, Natal, RN, Brazil
b Department of Clinical Analysis and Toxicology, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte, RN, Brazil
c Department of Surgery, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte, Natal, RN, Brazil
d Faculdade de Medicina, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte, Natal, RN, Brazil
e Department of Gynecology and Obstetrics, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte, Natal, RN, Brazil
Highlights

  • Obstructive sleep apnea affects one billion people worldwide and is associated with cardiometabolic risk and cognitive impairment.

  • Drug therapy for the management of sleep apnea has been investigated, but no robust evidence that supports its benefits has been found to date.

  • The combination of noradrenergic and antimuscarinic drugs shows promising results.

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Tables (2)
Table 1. Search Strategy for PubMed.
Table 2. Qualitative synthesis of the included studies.
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Abstract
Objective

Summarize the evidence on drug therapies for obstructive sleep apnea.

Methods

The Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines were followed. PubMed, Embase, Scopus, Web of Science, SciELO, LILACS, Scopus, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, and ClinicalTrials.gov were searched on February 17th, 2023. A search strategy retrieved randomized clinical trials comparing the Apnea-Hypopnea Index (AHI) in pharmacotherapies. Studies were selected and data was extracted by two authors independently. The risk of bias was assessed using the Cochrane Risk of Bias tool. RevMan 5.4. was used for data synthesis.

Results

4930 articles were obtained, 68 met inclusion criteria, and 29 studies (involving 11 drugs) were combined in a meta-analysis. Atomoxetine plus oxybutynin vs placebo in AHI mean difference of -7.71 (-10.59, -4.83) [Fixed, 95 % CI, I2 = 50 %, overall effect: Z = 5.25, p < 0.001]. Donepezil vs placebo in AHI mean difference of -8.56 (-15.78, -1.33) [Fixed, 95 % CI, I2 = 21 %, overall effect: Z = 2.32, p = 0.02]. Sodium oxybate vs placebo in AHI mean difference of -5.50 (-9.28, -1.73) [Fixed, 95 % CI, I2 = 32 %, overall effect: Z = 2.86, p = 0.004]. Trazodone vs placebo in AHI mean difference of -12.75 (-21.30, -4.19) [Fixed, 95 % CI, I2 = 0 %, overall effect: Z = 2.92, p = 0.003].

Conclusion

The combination of noradrenergic and antimuscarinic drugs shows promising results. Identifying endotypes may be the key to future drug therapies for obstructive sleep apnea. Moreover, studies with longer follow-up assessing the safety and sustained effects of these treatments are needed.

PROSPERO registration number

CRD42022362639.

Keywords:
Obstructive Sleep Apneas
Drug therapies
Polysomnography
Systematic review
Full Text
Introduction

Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA) is a condition in which repetitive upper airway closure occurs during sleep, leading to decreased oxygen saturation and impaired sleep architecture.1 It is estimated to affect one billion people worldwide2 and is associated with cardiometabolic risk and cognitive impairment.3

There are many treatments for OSA, such as behavioral measures, myofascial exercises, oral appliances, surgeries, Positive Airway Pressure (PAP), and hypoglossal nerve stimulators.4 Although PAP treatment remains the leading choice for moderate and severe OSA, its adherence rate is low.5

Recent research on the pathophysiology brought light to possible targets for pharmacotherapy.6 The OSA pathophysiological traits (endotypes) are the anatomy of the upper airway susceptible to collapse; the poor pharynx dilator muscle responsiveness; the low arousal respiratory threshold; and the oversensitive ventilatory control system (high loop gain).7

Drug therapy for the management of sleep apnea has been investigated, but no robust evidence that supports its benefits has been found to date.8

The aim of this systematic review and meta-analysis is to summarize the evidence on pharmacotherapy for the treatment of OSA in adults.

Methods

This review follows the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines.9 The protocol is registered with the International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews (PROSPERO CRD42022362639).

Inclusion criteria

Randomized Clinical Trials (RCT) compared the Apnea-Hypopnea Index (AHI) of pharmacotherapies for adults with OSA.

PICOT strategy

  • -

    Population/Participants: Adults diagnosed with OSA.

  • -

    Intervention: Any drug therapy intended to treat OSA.

  • -

    Comparator/Control: Placebo.

  • -

    Outcomes: AHI.

  • -

    Type of study: RCT.

Patient and public involvement

There was no patient or public involvement.

Search strategy

PubMed, Embase, Scopus, Web of Science, SciELO, LILACS, Scopus, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, and ClinicalTrials.gov were searched with no limitations to date or language. All electronic databases were searched on February 2023. The search strategy to be used in PubMed is presented in Table 1.

Table 1.

Search Strategy for PubMed.

  MeSh Terms and Keywords 
Sleep apnea syndromes 
Obstructive sleep apnea 
Sleep apnea 
OR / 1‒3 
Drug therapy 
Pharmaceutical preparations 
OR / 5‒6 
Polysomnography 
Death 
10  Myocardial Infarction 
11  Stroke 
12  Adverse effects 
13  Health-related quality of life 
14  Sleep quality 
15  Weight loss 
16  Oximetry 
17  OR / 8‒16 
18  4 AND 7 AND 17 
Data collection and analysis

The articles were imported to Rayyan, and duplicates were removed. Two authors independently screened by title, abstract, and full text to determine inclusion criteria. A third reviewer resolved the discrepancies.

Data extraction and management

Two independent authors extracted data from the included studies. The latter were inserted into a database. Meta-analysis was conducted for the studies that could be combined.

Risk of bias assessment

Two reviewers independently assessed the risk of bias using the Cochrane Risk of Bias Tool (RoB 2).10 Each study was evaluated for the randomization process, deviations from intended interventions, missing outcome data, measurement of the outcome, and selection of the reported results.

Assessment of heterogeneity

The I2 statistics were used to assess heterogeneity, below 25 % was considered low heterogeneity, between 25 % and 50 % moderate heterogeneity, and above 50 % high heterogeneity.

Measures of the treatment effect

AHI was extracted as a continuous variable, and the mean difference with a 95 % Confidence Interval was used. This was performed using Review Manager (RevMan 5.4) software.

Analysis

RevMan 5.4 was used to perform the statistical analysis. In the heterogeneity assessment, when I2 was > 50 %, a random-effects model was used, otherwise, a fixed-effect model was applied.

Grading quality of evidence

The Grading of Recommendations Assessment Development and Evaluation (GRADE) approach was used to evaluate the strength of the evidence of the systematic review results.11

Results

The database search retrieved 4930 articles, duplicates were removed, and two independent authors screened 3900 titles, 319 were assessed for eligibility by abstract. 68 of which met the inclusion criteria, and finally, 29 studies could be combined in the meta-analysis (11 drugs). The PRISMA flow diagram summarizes the selection process (Fig. 1). Qualitative synthesis is shown in Table 2.

Fig. 1.

Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses flow diagram of the selection process.

(0.27MB).
Table 2.

Qualitative synthesis of the included studies.

Author/Year  Design  Drug  Endotype  Follow-up  Main findings 
Kinouchi 2023  RCT OL crossover  AtoOxy  MR  1 night  17  AtoOxy therapy does not reduce AHI in Japanese OSA patients. 
Taranto-Motnemurro 2020  RCT DB crossover  AtoOxy  MR  1 night  17  AtoOxy markedly improved the measures of upper airway collapsibility. 
Taranto-Motnemurro 2019  RCT DB crossover  AtoOxy  MR  1 night  20  AtoOxy greatly reduced OSA severity. 
Rosenberg 2022  RCT DB crossover  AtoOxy  MR  1 night  30  AtoOxy had a statistically significant meaningful difference from placebo. 
Schweitzer 2023  RCT DB crossover  AtoOxy  MR  1 night  60  AtoOxy improved AHI in patients with moderate pharyngeal collapsibility. 
Li 2016  RCT DB crossover  Donepezil  LG  1 night  41  A single dose of donepezil did not appear to affect the severity of OSA. 
Sukys-Claudino 2011  RCT DB parallel  Donepezil  LG  4 weeks  21  Donepezil treatment improved OSA index and oxygen saturation. 
Moraes 2008  RCT DB parallel  Donepezil  LG  3 months  23  Donepezil improved AHI in patients with Alzheimer disease. 
Lettieri 2008  RCT DB parallel  Eszopiclone  ArTh  1 night  79  The severity of OSA did not differ between eszopiclone and placebo. 
Eckert 2011  RCT DB crossover  Eszopiclone  ArTh  1 night  17  Eszopiclone increased ArTh and lowered AHI in patients with OSA. 
Rosenberg 2007  RCT DB crossover  Eszopiclone  ArTh  1 night  21  Mean total AHI was not significantly different in eszopiclone from placebo. 
Kiely 2004  RCT DB crossover  Fluticasone  UAA  4 weeks  23  Intranasal fluticasone is of benefit to some patients with OSA and rhinitis. 
Smith 2019  RCT DB parallel  Fluticasone /montelukast  UAA  3 months  26  No significant difference in AHI was found between treatment and placebo. 
Acar 2013  RCT DB parallel  Mometasone  UAA  6 weeks  26  Treating allergic rhinitis has a positive effect on OSA severity. 
Carley 2007  RCT DB crossover  Mirtazapine  MR  1 week  12  Mirtazapine lowered AHI but increased sedation and weight gain. 
Marshall 2008a  RCT DB crossover  Mirtazapine  MR  2 weeks  36  Study discontinued prematurely due to trial failure and safety concerns. 
Marshall 2008b  RCT DB parallel  Mirtazapine  MR  2 weeks  18  Mirtazapine did not improve OSA severity and induced weight gain. 
Clarenbach 2008  RCT DB crossover  Xylometazoline  UAA  1 week  12  Nasal decongestion slightly reduced AHI. 
An 2018  RCT DB crossover  Oxymetazoline  UAA  1 night  15  Improving nasal patency by decongestant could improve AHI. 
Perger 2022  RCT DB crossover  ReboxOxy  MR  1 week  16  ReboxOxy did not improve OSA severity assessed by AHI, but lowered HB. 
Berger 2023  RCT DB crossover  ReboxOxy  MR  1 week  15  ReboxOxy greatly decreased OSA severity and increased vigilance. 
Altree 2023  RCT DB crossover  ReboxOxy  MR  1 night  16  Reboxetine as a single agent or combined with oxybutynin improves AHI. 
George 2010  RCT DB crossover  Sodium oxybate /Zolpidem  ArTh  1 night  42  SXB does not negatively impact SDB but might increase central apneas. 
George 2011  RCT DB parallel  Sodium oxybate  ArTh  2 weeks  48  It is not clear how sodium oxybate might reduce AHI in OSA patients. 
Chen 2021  RCT DB crossover  Trazodone  ArTh  1 night  22  Trazodone significantly increased the percentage SWS and improved AHI. 
Smales 2015  RCT DB crossover  Trazodone  ArTh  1 night  15  Trazodone resulted in a significant reduction in AHI. 
Messineo2020  RCT DB crossover  Zolpidem  ArTh  1 night  19  Zolpidem did not change AHI. 
Carter 2016  RCT DB crossover  Zopiclone  ArTh  1 night  12  Zopiclone increased ArTh with no impact on AHI. 
Carter 2018  RCT DB parallel  Zopiclone  ArTh  1 month  30  There was a tendency of reduction of AHI with zopiclone. 
Carter 2020  RCT DB crossover  Zopiclone  ArTh  1 night  28  Zopiclone did not systematically reduce AHI or increased ArTh. 

RCT, Randomized Clinical Trial, DB, Double-Blind; OL, Open-Label; MR, Muscle Responsiveness; LG, Loop Gain; ArTh, Arousal Threshold; UAA, Upper Airway Anatomy; AHI, Apnea-Hypopnea Index; AtoOxy, Atomoxetine + Oxybutynin; ReboxOxy, Reboxetine + Oxybutynin, OSA, Obstructive Sleep Apnea; HB, Hypoxic Burden; SWS, Slow Wave Sleep.

Upper airway anatomy

A few different drug mechanisms can potentially target the collapsibility of the upper airway, such as weight loss medication that can reduce fat tissue on the tongue base and neck, diuretics reducing fluid retention, and nasal obstruction can be approached with intranasal steroids and decongestants.6

Both the use of nasal steroids (3 studies) and, nasal decongestants (2 studies) versus placebo showed a tendency for improvement in AHI, without statistical significance (Fig. 2).12-16

Fig. 2.

Forest plots illustrating apnea-hypopnea index mean difference in different drug therapies for obstructive sleep apnea against placebo.

(0.98MB).
Muscle responsiveness

The combination of noradrenergic and antimuscarinic drugs was tested in different trials, Atomoxetine plus Oxybutynin (AtoOxy) showed significant improvement in AHI with combined data from 5 studies, mean difference of −7.71 (−10.59, −4.83) [Fixed, 95 % CI, I2 = 50 %, overall effect: Z = 5.25, p < 0.001].17-21 Reboxetine plus Oxybutynin (ReboxOxy) was assessed in 3 studies, and although there was a tendency for improvement, no significance was found (Fig. 2).22-24

Mirtazapine was tested by two authors in 3 trials, none of which evidenced the benefits of this drug treatment for OSA, moreover, one of these trials was discontinued due to trial failure and safety concerns.25,26

Arousal threshold

Eszopiclone, zolpidem, and zopiclone were studied and showed no difference in AHI from placebo.27-33 Sodium Oxybate (SXB) and trazodone showed significant improvement in AHI. SXB vs placebo in AHI (2 studies, 90 patients) mean difference of −5.50 (−9.28, −1.73) [Fixed, 95 % CI, I2 = 32 %, overall effect: Z = 2.86, p = 0.004].34,35 Trazodone vs placebo in AHI (2 studies, 37 patients) mean difference of −12.75 (−21.30, −4.19) [Fixed, 95 % CI, I2 = 0 %, overall effect: Z = 2.92, p = 0.003].36,37

Loop gain

Concerning loop gain, the only drug with enough studies that met inclusion criteria and could be combined into a meta-analysis was donepezil. Three studies assessed its effect on AHI against placebo demonstrating improvement in OSA severity, with a mean difference of −8.56 (−15.78, −1.33) [Fixed, 95 % CI, I2 = 21 %, overall effect: Z = 2.32, p = 0.02].38-40

Risk of bias assessment

The majority of the studies included were double-blind randomized control trials with an overall low risk or with some concerns of bias (Fig. 3). The strength of the evidence was assessed by GRADE (Fig. 4).

Fig. 3.

Risk of bias of the studies included in the meta-analysis.

(0.77MB).
Fig. 4.

GRADE strength of the evidence assessment.

(0.7MB).
Discussion

The combination of atomoxetine and oxybutynin was found to provide the most significant enhancement in OSA severity.17-21 Nevertheless, all studies with this treatment were single-night studies with small sample sizes.

Historically, the use of drugs that would increase the arousal threshold in patients was thought to worsen apnea by decreasing muscle dilator response and promoting collapsibility. However, the use of zolpidem, eszopiclone, and zopiclone was found not to impact OSA severity compared to placebo.27-33 Moreover, sodium oxybate and trazodone showed improvement in AHI.34-37

It is important to frame that this study only brings data from primary studies that met the defined inclusion criteria and could be combined in a meta-analysis. A limitation is that drugs that have been tested by a single RCT have not been included. There is also heterogeneity among populations included in different trials that were combined, such as different degrees of OSA severity which may impact drug efficacy.

Moreover, to better understand physio-pathological endotypes other outcomes such as loop gain, arousal threshold, muscle compensation, and hypoxic burden could be assessed.

Conclusion

While numerous drugs have been investigated, only a few have shown promising results, like the combination of noradrenergic and antimuscarinic drugs. Identifying endotypes that respond to each pharmacological mechanism may be the key to future drug therapies for OSA. Moreover, studies with longer follow-up periods assessing the safety and sustained effects of these treatments are needed.

Authors’ contributions

Nobre ML was responsible for the study conception and design, acquisition of data, analysis and interpretation of data, drafting of manuscript, and critical revision. Sarmento ACA, Oliveira PF, and Wanderley FF were responsible for the interpretation of data, drafting of manuscript, and critical revision. Diniz Júnior J was responsible for the study conception and design, drafting of the manuscript and critical revision. Gonçalves AK was responsible for the study conception and design, analysis, and interpretation of data, drafting of the manuscript and critical revision.

Funding

This research did not receive any specific grant from funding agencies in the public, commercial, or not-for-profit sectors.

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