The University of Southampton
University of Southampton Institutional Repository

Feasibility and safety of and adherence to auto-adjusting continuous positive airways pressure for 6 months in sickle cell anaemia

Feasibility and safety of and adherence to auto-adjusting continuous positive airways pressure for 6 months in sickle cell anaemia
Feasibility and safety of and adherence to auto-adjusting continuous positive airways pressure for 6 months in sickle cell anaemia
Aim Several complications of sickle cell anaemia, including pain, cardiac dysfunction, stroke, silent cerebral infarction (SCI) and cognitive dysfunction appear to be related to low daytime and night-time oxygen saturation (SpO2). SCA complications can be made worse if patients have extra dips in night time oxygen levels when the upper airway closes repeatedly during sleep: this obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) is common in SCA. Treatments used for low SpO2/OSA in the general population include autoadjusting Continuous Positive Airways Pressure (APAP) but safety remains a concern for haematologists and the feasibility of using this longer term are unknown for this population. A feasibility study was therefore designed to address these issues. Methods Randomised trial involving 60 patients with HbSS (30 children and 30 adults) randomised to APAP or a control arm (standard treatment with no APAP) for 6 months. Adherence data from a removable card in the machine is available for patients randomised to APAP. Results 30 children and 27 adults have been randomised. Adherence data are available for 24 patients using the APAP machine over the past 6-186 (median 73) days; they adhered mostly more than 4 hours/night for 12%-98% of nights (median 77%). After two weeks, the mean change in haemoglobin in those on APAP was 0.0 (SD 5.3) g/L compared with 0.75 (SD 5.1) g/l in those on standard care. Mean change in red cell count in those on APAP was 0.0 (SD-0.26) g/L compared with-0.06 (SD 0.24) g/l for standard care. The mean change in reticulocyte count in those on APAP was-41 (SD 76) g/L compared with 18 (SD 74) g/l. There was no significant difference in haemoglobin, red cell count or reticulocytes at 2 weeks or 3 months in patients in either arm. Two patients in the standard care arm were admitted for pain and one was admitted for gastrointestinal problems while one patient on APAP was admitted 4 times for pain. Conclusions It is feasible to enrol and retain patients with SCA in RCTs of APAP, which does not appear unsafe in terms of causing bone marrow suppression or pain admissions.
Inusa, B
34506234-2179-4399-b3ea-5e8ea164ef59
Chakraborty, S
93dab7ab-f9aa-41f0-8f6d-882641f3acb8
Rees, DC
8edfda69-3e13-4e7a-83b9-6bb2784f1968
Stotesbury, H
18b70efc-1896-481c-8d26-ecf0b8b45d0a
Kawadler, J
7d035760-69ea-4b6c-8a7a-771b73453db8
Kirkham, FJ
1dfbc0d5-aebe-4439-9fb2-dac6503bcd58
Inusa, B
34506234-2179-4399-b3ea-5e8ea164ef59
Chakraborty, S
93dab7ab-f9aa-41f0-8f6d-882641f3acb8
Rees, DC
8edfda69-3e13-4e7a-83b9-6bb2784f1968
Stotesbury, H
18b70efc-1896-481c-8d26-ecf0b8b45d0a
Kawadler, J
7d035760-69ea-4b6c-8a7a-771b73453db8
Kirkham, FJ
1dfbc0d5-aebe-4439-9fb2-dac6503bcd58

Inusa, B, Chakraborty, S, Rees, DC, Stotesbury, H, Kawadler, J and Kirkham, FJ (2017) Feasibility and safety of and adherence to auto-adjusting continuous positive airways pressure for 6 months in sickle cell anaemia. Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health: Annual meeting, International Exhibition Centre, Birmingham, United Kingdom. 17 - 19 May 2017.

Record type: Conference or Workshop Item (Paper)

Abstract

Aim Several complications of sickle cell anaemia, including pain, cardiac dysfunction, stroke, silent cerebral infarction (SCI) and cognitive dysfunction appear to be related to low daytime and night-time oxygen saturation (SpO2). SCA complications can be made worse if patients have extra dips in night time oxygen levels when the upper airway closes repeatedly during sleep: this obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) is common in SCA. Treatments used for low SpO2/OSA in the general population include autoadjusting Continuous Positive Airways Pressure (APAP) but safety remains a concern for haematologists and the feasibility of using this longer term are unknown for this population. A feasibility study was therefore designed to address these issues. Methods Randomised trial involving 60 patients with HbSS (30 children and 30 adults) randomised to APAP or a control arm (standard treatment with no APAP) for 6 months. Adherence data from a removable card in the machine is available for patients randomised to APAP. Results 30 children and 27 adults have been randomised. Adherence data are available for 24 patients using the APAP machine over the past 6-186 (median 73) days; they adhered mostly more than 4 hours/night for 12%-98% of nights (median 77%). After two weeks, the mean change in haemoglobin in those on APAP was 0.0 (SD 5.3) g/L compared with 0.75 (SD 5.1) g/l in those on standard care. Mean change in red cell count in those on APAP was 0.0 (SD-0.26) g/L compared with-0.06 (SD 0.24) g/l for standard care. The mean change in reticulocyte count in those on APAP was-41 (SD 76) g/L compared with 18 (SD 74) g/l. There was no significant difference in haemoglobin, red cell count or reticulocytes at 2 weeks or 3 months in patients in either arm. Two patients in the standard care arm were admitted for pain and one was admitted for gastrointestinal problems while one patient on APAP was admitted 4 times for pain. Conclusions It is feasible to enrol and retain patients with SCA in RCTs of APAP, which does not appear unsafe in terms of causing bone marrow suppression or pain admissions.

This record has no associated files available for download.

More information

Published date: May 2017
Venue - Dates: Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health: Annual meeting, International Exhibition Centre, Birmingham, United Kingdom, 2017-05-17 - 2017-05-19

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 430186
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/430186
PURE UUID: 049cd1e7-8472-4e02-aef1-c12bfbc6e36d
ORCID for FJ Kirkham: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2443-7958

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 16 Apr 2019 16:30
Last modified: 13 Dec 2021 02:48

Export record

Contributors

Author: B Inusa
Author: S Chakraborty
Author: DC Rees
Author: H Stotesbury
Author: J Kawadler
Author: FJ Kirkham ORCID iD

Download statistics

Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.

View more statistics

Atom RSS 1.0 RSS 2.0

Contact ePrints Soton: eprints@soton.ac.uk

ePrints Soton supports OAI 2.0 with a base URL of http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/cgi/oai2

This repository has been built using EPrints software, developed at the University of Southampton, but available to everyone to use.

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we will assume that you are happy to receive cookies on the University of Southampton website.

×