Adaptive Servo-Ventilation for Central Sleep Apnea in Systolic Heart Failure
Hôpital Bichat-Claude-Bernard · Université Paris Cité · +13 more institutions
Abstract
Central sleep apnea is associated with poor prognosis and death in patients with heart failure. Adaptive servo-ventilation is a therapy that uses a noninvasive ventilator to treat central sleep apnea by delivering servo-controlled inspiratory pressure support on top of expiratory positive airway pressure. We investigated the effects of adaptive servo-ventilation in patients who had heart failure with reduced ejection fraction and predominantly central sleep apnea.
We randomly assigned 1325 patients with a left ventricular ejection fraction of 45% or less, an apnea-hypopnea index (AHI) of 15 or more events (occurrences of apnea or hypopnea) per hour, and a predominance of central events to receive guideline-based medical treatment with adaptive servo-ventilation or guideline-based medical treatment alone (control). The primary end point in the time-to-event analysis was the first event of death from any cause, lifesaving cardiovascular intervention (cardiac transplantation, implantation of a ventricular assist device, resuscitation after sudden cardiac arrest, or appropriate lifesaving shock), or unplanned hospitalization for worsening heart failure.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 86.53
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 26
Authors
11- MCMartín CowieCorresponding
Hôpital Bichat-Claude-Bernard, Université Paris Cité, Inserm, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Universität Hamburg, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Grenoble
- HWHolger Woehrle
ResMed (Germany)
- KWKarl Wegscheider
Universität Hamburg, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf
- CAChristiane Angermann
University of Würzburg, Universitätsklinikum Würzburg
- MDMarie‐Pia d’Ortho
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Central sleep apnea
- Ejection fraction
- Heart failure
- Cardiology
- Apnea–hypopnea index
- Hazard ratio
- Continuous positive airway pressure
- Good health and well-being