Endoscopic duodenal‐jejunal bypass liner treatment of moderate obstructive sleep apnoea—A pilot study

Author:

Yadagiri Mahender1,Kinney Fiona Y.2,Ashman Natalie3,Bleasdale John P.4,Fogden Edward N.5,Anderson Mark R.5,Walton Christopher6,Greenstone Michael A.7,Ryder Robert E. J.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Diabetes Department Sandwell & West Birmingham NHS Trust Birmingham UK

2. Research and Development Sandwell & West Birmingham NHS Trust Birmingham UK

3. Respiratory Physiology Sandwell & West Birmingham NHS Trust, City Hospital Birmingham UK

4. Anaesthetics Department Sandwell & West Birmingham NHS Trust, City Hospital Birmingham UK

5. Gastroenterology Department Sandwell & West Birmingham NHS Trust, City Hospital Birmingham UK

6. Diabetes Department Hull Royal Infirmary Hull UK

7. Respiratory Department Castle Hill Hospital Cottingham UK

Abstract

SummaryWe aimed to assess the extent to which people with type 2 diabetes or pre‐diabetes, obesity (BMI 30–45 kg/m2) and moderate obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) requiring continuous positive airway pressure ventilation (CPAP) were able to discontinue CPAP following EndoBarrier‐related weight loss. We assessed sleep and metabolic parameters before, during and after EndoBarrier in 12 participants with moderate OSA requiring CPAP (75% female, 8/12 [66%] type 2 diabetes, 4/12 [34%] prediabetes, mean ± SD age 52.6 ± 9.7 years, BMI 37.4 ± 3.5 kg/m2, median duration of OSA while on CPAP 9.0 [7.0–15.0] months). With EndoBarrier in‐situ, mean ± SD Apnoea Hypopnoea Index (AHI) fell by 9.1 ± 5.0 events/h from 18.9 ± 3.8 to 9.7 ± 3.0 events/h (p < .001) with an associated reduction in symptoms of daytime sleepiness (mean Epworth Sleepiness Score) such that all the 12 participants no longer required CPAP according to National Institute for Health and Care Excellence criteria. After EndoBarrier removal, 10/12 (83%) patients attended follow‐up and at 12 months after removal, AHI remained below 15 in 5/10 (50%) patients but in other five the AHI rose above 15 such that restarting CPAP was recommended as justified by their symptoms. Rather than restart CPAP, two patients lost the regained weight and their AHI dropped below 15 again. Thus, 7/10 (70%) of patients were able to remain off CPAP 12 or more months after EndoBarrier removal. These results demonstrate major benefit of EndoBarrier in moderate OSA, allowing all patients to discontinue CPAP during treatment, and with maintenance of improvement at follow‐up in 70%. They confirm previously demonstrated metabolic improvements in diabetes and obesity.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference37 articles.

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