Patients with obstructive sleep apnea experienced symptom reduction using sulthiame, a potential alternative to standard treatments.
Patients with obstructive sleep apnea experienced symptom reduction using sulthiame, a potential alternative to standard treatments.
An epilepsy drug could cure a potentially deadly snoring condition, suggests a new study.
Patients taking sulthiame – currently used for childhood epilepsy – in a clinical trial experienced a reduction in their symptoms of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), say scientists.
Patients with OSA often snore loudly, their breathing starts and stops during the night, and they may wake up several times.
Not only does it cause tiredness, but it can also increase the risk of high blood pressure, stroke, heart disease and type 2 diabetes.
Scientists say OSA is very common, but many people don’t even realize they have the condition.
The most common – and most effective – treatments, especially positive airway pressure devices, are meant to be used every night.
Professor Jan Hedner, of Sahlgrenska University Hospital and the University of Gothenburg in Sweden, said: “The standard treatment for obstructive sleep apnea is sleeping with a machine that blows air through a face mask to keep the airways open.
“Unfortunately, many people find these machines hard to use over the long term, so there is a need to find alternative treatments.
“We also need a better understanding of the underlying mechanisms in OSA to help clinicians give more personalized treatment.”
The trial involved 298 people with OSA being treated at 28 different centers in Spain, France, Belgium, Germany and the Czech Republic.
All the patients could not tolerate or refused to use continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) machines or mouthpieces designed to keep the airways open.
The patients were assessed with polysomnography at the start of the trial and after four weeks and 12 weeks in the study.
Polysomnography measures breathing, levels of oxygen in the blood, heart rhythm, eye movements, brain and muscle activity during a night of sleep.
The patients were divided into four groups: 74 people took 100mg of sulthiame daily, 74 took 200mg, 75 took 300mg and the remaining 75 took a placebo.
Hedner explained that sulthiame is a drug that targets the respiratory system by inhibiting an enzyme called carbonic anhydrase and stimulating the upper airway muscles.
The people taking sulthiame had fewer pauses in their breathing and higher levels of oxygen in their blood during sleep, according to the findings.
A measure of the frequency of respiratory pauses during sleep, called AHI3a, was 17.8% lower for patients taking the lowest dose, 34.8% lower for patients on the medium dose and 39.9% lower for patients on the highest dose.
When the research team used another measure called AHI4, the effect of the treatment was close to a 50% reduction of respiratory pauses with a more “profound lowering” of oxygen levels.
And OSA patients who had been feeling sleepy during the daytime also felt less so when they took sulthiame.
Hedner said side effects experienced by the people taking sulthiame – such pins and needles, headache, fatigue, and nausea – were generally mild or moderate.
He said: “People taking sulthiame in the trial had a reduction in OSA symptoms such as stopping breathing during the night and feeling sleepy during the day.
“Their average levels of oxygen in the blood were also improved with the treatment.
“This suggests that sulthiame could be an effective treatment for OSA, especially for those who find they cannot use the existing mechanical treatments.”
Hedner added: “Although sulthiame is already available as a treatment for childhood epilepsy, we still need to carry out a phase III study to confirm the beneficial respiratory effects of this drug in a larger group of patients with OSA.”
The findings were presented at the European Respiratory Society (ERS) Congress in Vienna, Austria.
Professor Sophia Schiza, head of the ERS assembly on sleep-disordered breathing, welcomed the findings.
Schiza, of the University of Crete in Greece, said: “Many of us know that we snore or that our partner snores.
“If snoring is accompanied by other symptoms, such as waking up often in the night, feeling fatigued and/or sleepy during the daytime, then it’s time to speak to a doctor.
“Because obstructive sleep apnoea increases the risk of serious health problems such as high blood pressure, heart and metabolic disease, it’s vital that we diagnose and treat the condition.
“Treatments are available, but because they don’t work for everyone, we need more ways to treat the disease, based on individualized diagnostic and treatment approaches.”
She added: “This is one of the first studies to suggest that a drug treatment could help some patients, and the results are promising.
“We need to continue testing sulthiame and other treatments to understand their long-term effects, including any side effects.
“For example, we’d like to see whether treatment can help with lowering blood pressure and preventing cardiovascular disease for people with OSA.”
Produced in association with SWNS Talker