Abstract
Background Obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) is strongly associated with systemic hypertension, but there are limited data on the relationship with blood pressure (BP) in normotensive subjects. Here, we examined the relationship of OSA with nocturnal BP in a documented diurnal normotensive cohort, explored potential intermediate pathways and assessed the effects on BP of continuous positive airways pressure (CPAP) therapy.
Methods 65 males referred for assessment of possible OSA and normotensive on 24-hour BP monitoring underwent overnight inpatient polysomnography (age 41±7 years, body mass index (BMI) 34±6 kg·m−2, apnoea–hypopnoea index (AHI) 14 (interquartile range 5–26)). Urine and serum were assessed for markers of sympathetic activation, renin–angiotensin–aldosterone system activity, oxidative stress, endothelial function and systemic inflammation. In a subset of patients, 24-hour BP monitoring was repeated after CPAP therapy.
Results Within this normotensive cohort, night-time systolic and diastolic BP and nocturnal BP dip were highest in the fourth OSA severity quartile (p<0.05). Nocturnal BP dip correlated with AHI (r=−0.327, p<0.05) and oxygen desaturation index (ODI) (r=−0.371, p<0.05), but only ODI was an independent predictor of BP dip (B=–0.351, p<0.01) and non-dipping status (B=0.046, p<0.05). Overnight urinary norepinephrine correlated with nocturnal systolic BP (r=0.387, p<0.01) with a trend towards correlation with systolic dipping (p=0.087). In 20 CPAP-treated patients, night-time systolic BP decreased (p<0.05) and mean nocturnal BP dip increased (p≤0.05).
Conclusion In this normotensive cohort, OSA severity was associated with higher nocturnal BP, which improved following CPAP therapy, and intermittent hypoxia was the most important OSA-related variable in this relationship.
Abstract
There is a strong association in a normotensive cohort between OSA and nocturnal blood pressure, with intermittent hypoxia as an important mechanistic pathway https://bit.ly/2SFvWiB
Introduction
Obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) is highly prevalent in the general population with an estimated global prevalence of close to one billion affected [1]. Hypertension is present in up to 50% of patients with OSA, which is about double the prevalence of hypertension in general population studies [2]. A non-dipping nocturnal blood pressure (BP) profile (<10% day-to-night systolic blood pressure difference) is especially likely in OSA patients [3–6], even in the absence of significant hypertension. The likelihood of non-dipping BP correlates with OSA severity in population studies [7], and cardiovascular events are more frequent in OSA patients with a non-dipping BP profile than those with a normal dipping pattern, even in the absence of diagnosed hypertension [8]. Despite the extensive publications on the relationships between OSA and hypertension and responses to therapy, there are few data on the relationship between OSA and 24-hour BP patterns in OSA patients who are normotensive on 24-hour ambulatory BP monitoring (ABPM) and free of any cardiovascular disease or other chronic disorders. Sapiña-Beltrán and co-workers evaluated the impact of continuous positive airways pressure (CPAP) therapy on 24-hour BP levels in OSA patients who were normotensive on office BP measurements and demonstrated a significant difference in mean nocturnal BP between dippers and non-dippers after 6 months of CPAP therapy, the former showing an increase and the latter a decrease [9]. The potential for BP reduction or return of a dipping pattern in normotensive patients with OSA would provide an additional consideration in treatment decisions for individual patients and may also have implications for the possible primary prevention of hypertension in such patients. The question of primary prevention assumes additional significance in the context of the recent SAVE trial, which reported that CPAP therapy conferred no benefit in the secondary prevention of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality in patients with pre-existing cardiovascular disease [10].
Based on these considerations, we studied the relationship between nocturnal BP pattern and OSA in a prospective cohort of patients referred for investigation of suspected OSA who were proven normotensive on 24-hour ABPM and free of any cardiovascular or other comorbidity. The primary objective of the study was to examine the relationship of OSA with nocturnal BP dipping and other BP variables in such normotensive subjects. Secondary objectives were: (1) to explore a range of potential intermediate pathways in this relationship that have previously been associated with OSA, hypertension and other cardiovascular diseases; and (2) to assess the potential effects of therapy on nocturnal BP pattern in patients from the cohort who were diagnosed with OSA and commenced on CPAP therapy.
Methods
Subjects
Consecutive patients referred to the Sleep Clinic in St Vincent's University Hospital were screened for inclusion to the study and were considered if they were male and aged 18 to 70 years without a known diagnosis of hypertension. Exclusion criteria included any previous investigation or diagnosis of OSA, history of cardiovascular disease (including hypertension, coronary artery disease or previous myocardial infarction), metabolic disease (including diabetes), thyroid disease or any requirement for long-term medication. Consenting participants were included if normotension was confirmed on ABPM. Prior approval was obtained from the Ethics and Medical Research Committee of St Vincent's Healthcare Group, Dublin, Ireland, and all subjects provided written informed consent.
Study protocol
Polysomnography
Subjects underwent an attended, inpatient polysomnography (PSG) in the Sleep Laboratory at St Vincent's University Hospital, Dublin, Ireland. Following the AASM 2012 [11] Scoring Manual, a ≥90% decrease in oronasal airflow below pre-event baseline for ≥10 s during sleep resulted in an apnoea, and a ≥30% decrease in oronasal airflow below pre-event baseline accompanied by either a ≥3% decrease in oxygen saturations or an arousal from sleep resulted in the scoring of a hypopnoea.
ABPM
On the morning after PSG, an ABPM was fitted to the subject's non-dominant arm (WatchBP03; Microlife Corp., Taipei, Taiwan). The patient's self-reported routine sleep and wake times were programmed into the device and this information was rechecked with the patient when it was returned. BP measurements were taken every 20 minutes during daytime (awake) hours and 30 minutes during night-time (asleep) hours to ensure at least one measurement per hour.
Biomarkers of intermediate pathways
Patients were instructed to void their bladder before getting into bed for the PSG. All urine voided throughout the night including the first void on waking in the morning was collected in a polyethylene container; 100 mL 1 M hydrochloric acid was added to the container prior to the collection as a preservative agent. Samples were analysed immediately after collection in the laboratory of St Vincent's University Hospital using high-performance liquid chromatography to determine urinary noradrenaline (nmol·L−1) for measurement of urinary catecholamines.
In the morning following the PSG, venous blood samples were taken from each patient in a fasting state using BD Vacutainers (Becton, Dickinson and Company, Franklin Lakes, USA). Two samples with added silica and one sample with added lithium heparin were centrifuged for 15 minutes at 1800 xg and 4°C to separate plasma and serum, respectively. Following centrifugation, the samples were separated into 0.5-mL aliquots in sterile cryogenic vials and stored at −80°C for future analysis. After collection of all patient samples, analysis was done using commercially available sandwich enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISA) for the detection of plasma renin, interleukin-6 (IL-6), tumour necrosis factor-α (TNF-α), oxidised low-density lipoprotein (oxLDL) and endothelin 1.
CPAP
Subjects with OSA diagnosed on PSG were subsequently offered therapy with CPAP as per the departmental protocol, including attended inpatient CPAP initiation and titration. Subjects who accepted CPAP therapy were contacted and invited to return for repeat ABPM testing as per the protocol described above.
Statistical analysis
Data analysis was done using IBM SPSS Statistics for Windows (Version 20, Armonk, NY, USA). Patient characteristics and ABPM results were categorised into OSA severity quartiles based on the AHI. Data are displayed as mean (sd) or median (interquartile range) depending on distribution. Groups were compared by one-way ANOVA followed by Bonferroni post hoc comparison. Patient characteristics were univariately correlated with % BP dip and non-dipping status. Linear and logistic regression models were built to calculate predictors of % BP dip and non-dipping status. Paired t-test and McNemar's test were used to compare measured variables and ratio of non-dippers respectively in subjects’ pre- and post-CPAP therapy.
Results
Baseline characteristics
65 consecutive male patients were included in the study. Baseline characteristics of the study population, stratified by AHI quartiles, are described in table 1. The four groups were similar with regard to age, smoking status, lipid levels, renal function and Epworth sleepiness score. However, subjects with more severe OSA were more obese, had higher levels of glycosylated haemoglobin (HbA1c) and increased insulin resistance as calculated by HOMA-IR.
24-hour BP recordings
ABPM was obtained in all subjects. As shown in table 2, all subjects were normotensive and there was no difference in daytime values between AHI quartiles. However, nocturnal BP increased with higher AHI, and subjects in the 4th AHI quartile had a significantly lower dipping ratio in comparison to subjects in quartile 1. Univariate linear correlation analysis showed a significant inverse correlation between the percentage in BP dip and body mass index (BMI), neck circumference and markers indicating the severity of OSA. The presence of a non-dipping BP status correlated with increasing AHI, oxygen desaturation index (ODI) and lower minimal oxygen saturation values (table 3). Stepwise multiple linear regression analysis identified the ODI and the amount of smoking (pack-years) as independent predictors of BP dip (table 4). Furthermore, subjects in AHI quartile 4 versus quartile 1 had increased odds of a non-dipping BP status, but this failed to reach statistical significance (p=0.063) (data not shown). However, increasing severity of ODI, but not AHI, conferred significantly increased odds of the non-dipping status, independent of age, BMI, smoking status and insulin sensitivity (table 4).
Relationship between BP dip and biomarkers of potential intermediate pathways
To gain insight into potential mechanistic pathways underlying the association of OSA and non-dipping BP, we performed a correlation analysis of BP values with markers of sympathetic activation, renin–angiotensin–aldosterone system (RAAS) activity, oxidative stress, endothelial function and systemic inflammation. Only urinary norepinephrine as a marker of sympathetic activity correlated negatively with nocturnal systolic BP, and there was a trend towards significant correlation with the percentage of nocturnal dip (p=0.087) and non-dipping BP status (p=0.058) (table 5).
Effect of CPAP therapy on BP dip
Thirty-one (n=31) in the cohort were commenced on CPAP therapy, of which 20 (n=20) agreed to return for repeat ABPM and assessment. The mean time on CPAP therapy at the return assessment was 18±6 months. There was no change in BMI, no other diseases were diagnosed or medications introduced. Objective CPAP compliance data were available in 19 of 20 subjects (95%), demonstrating a mean 90-day usage of 90.1±18.9% of nights. Mean usage hours per night over 90 days was 6.39±1.14 hours. Average CPAP pressure was 10.7±1.5 cmH2O. CPAP therapy resulted in significant improvement in nocturnal systolic BP and BP dip (figure 1a, b). Furthermore, the number of subjects with a dipping pattern increased from 5 (25%) to 9 (45%) (p=0.109).
Discussion
The principal finding of this study is that OSA correlates with loss of nocturnal BP dipping and other BP variables in this cohort of patients who had no comorbidity and were normotensive based on 24-hour ABPM measurements. The nocturnal dip in BP as well as the per cent of non-dippers was more pronounced among the highest severity quartile of OSA and correlated strongly with the AHI and ODI. As a secondary end point, the data suggest that effective therapy with CPAP in this normotensive cohort may be associated with significant recovery of the nocturnal BP dipping pattern in addition to a lowering of systolic BP levels.
Our findings agree with previous reports that a non-dipping nocturnal blood pressure (BP) profile is particularly likely in patients with OSA [5], even in the absence of significant hypertension [8]. The prevalence of a non-dipping BP was higher in our cohort than that reported in other studies [5, 7]. However, these latter cohorts included treated hypertensive subjects and thus represent more heterogeneous populations. Data from the Wisconsin Sleep Cohort Study indicate a dose–response increase in the development of non-dipping hypertension with severity of OSA at baseline when followed for 7 years [7], which is confirmed by the report of Seif and co-authors [5] demonstrating that in patients with established cardiovascular disease and moderate or severe OSA there is a 4% increase in the odds of having a non-dipping BP profile per unit increase in AHI. Furthermore, recent evidence from this department indicates that non-dipping nocturnal BP in hypertensive patients is a strong predictor of OSA, regardless of symptom profile [12].
The present data indicate that ODI was also an independent predictor of BP dip, consistent with previous research suggesting that measurements of oxygen desaturation, as a marker of OSA severity, are strongly associated with hypertension [13–15]. Furthermore, stepwise linear regression analysis showed that ODI was superior to AHI in predicting nocturnal blood pressure dip (table 4), which supports the previous report of Tkacova and co-authors [14] that ODI is superior to AHI in the prediction of prevalent hypertension in a large sleep clinic population. Since ODI is the most relevant clinical measure of intermittent hypoxia, this finding supports intermittent hypoxia as a key OSA-related variable that predicts loss of nocturnal dipping in OSA.
Effective therapy of OSA with CPAP has been demonstrated to lower blood pressure [4], especially at night [16], although the overall reduction in BP with CPAP therapy is relatively small [17–20]. 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure monitoring has been reported to be a useful tool in identifying diurnal BP patterns to help predict and quantify BP response to CPAP therapy in OSA [21]. Although CPAP has been demonstrated to reduce the frequency of pre-hypertension or masked hypertension in patients with severe OSA [22], the ability of CPAP therapy in OSA patients to limit the future development of hypertension is not proven [23]. The potential ability of CPAP therapy to reverse a non-dipping BP in normotensive OSA and prevent future hypertension or cardiovascular events presents a possibility of primary prevention in this at-risk population.
Although only a secondary study end point, the present report demonstrating beneficial effects of CPAP on the nocturnal dipping BP profile in these normotensive OSA patients has implications for the future likelihood of cardiovascular morbidity in such patients. Sapiña-Beltrán and co-authors [9] identified patients with normal office BP measurements and demonstrated a reduction in BP in after 6 months of CPAP therapy. In this latter report, the benefits of CPAP therapy to BP variables principally related to nocturnal non-dippers and those with masked hypertension. Our study differed from this latter report in that no patient had masked hypertension, as all subjects had normal 24-hour BP levels prior to enrolment. Another randomised study of CPAP therapy in severe OSA patients with pre-hypertension demonstrated a reduction in office systolic and diastolic BP in treated patients compared to controls [22], and a recent meta-analysis confirms that elevated pre-CPAP BP values and age <60 years are factors more likely to predict a BP response in OSA [17]. Male gender, Epworth sleepiness scale and BMI have been identified as predictors of BP reduction following CPAP therapy in normotensive OSA [24]. Overall, our findings provide supportive evidence that CPAP therapy is beneficial in the primary prevention of hypertension in patients with OSA and are especially relevant in the context of the recent SAVE trial [10], which reported that CPAP was ineffective in the secondary prevention of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality among patients with established cardiovascular disease. Further controlled prospective studies of CPAP therapy in normotensive OSA populations will be required to confirm this potential benefit.
Potential intermediate mechanisms involved in the development of hypertension in OSA are likely multi-factorial, but sympathetic activation appears particularly important [4]. Other proposed mechanisms include activation of the renin–angiotensin–aldosterone system (RAAS) [25], systemic and vascular inflammation, oxidative stress and endothelial dysfunction [26], although specific evidence relating these intermediate mechanisms to non-dipping nocturnal BP is limited [27]. We evaluated a range of potential intermediate mechanisms in our study population, but the only significant finding was a significant relationship between overnight urinary norepinephrine, which is a marker of sympathetic excitation, and nocturnal systolic BP levels. However, urinary norepinephrine showed only a non-significant trend towards a relationship with nocturnal BP dipping status. These findings agree with several previous reports indicating elevated urinary epinephrine levels and other measures of sympathetic excitation in OSA [28, 29]. No other significant relationship was found across the range of variables studied in our patient population, and thus our data provide no further insight into the mechanisms of BP dipping in these subjects.
The present report has several important strengths. The study cohort represents a carefully selected consecutive group of patients referred for investigation of suspected OSA who were free of all other comorbidities and were not taking any regular medication. All patients were normotensive based on 24-hour mean systolic and diastolic BP levels. These findings together with those of previous reports [9] suggest that large patient numbers may not be necessary to identify potential benefit of CPAP therapy for OSA in the primary prevention of hypertension.
The study also has several limitations. First, only male subjects were studied and thus the findings cannot be extrapolated to female OSA patients. This aspect is relevant in the context of recent reports indicating sex differences in clinical OSA phenotypes [30] and in predisposition to incident hypertension [31]. Second, not all patients who were commenced on CPAP therapy for OSA returned for follow-up. This failure was despite repeated efforts by the lead investigator to contact these patients, some of whom could not be contacted, and others declined to repeat the initial protocol after a period on CPAP therapy. Thus, we cannot exclude the possibility of selection bias in those patients who returned for follow-up evaluation. Thirdly, the variables collected to represent intermediate mechanisms in the development of OSA were not repeated in the cohort of patients treated with CPAP, so no conclusions can be made as to whether CPAP affected these variables.
In conclusion, this report confirms the strong association in a normotensive cohort between OSA and nocturnal BP and supports intermittent hypoxia as an important mechanistic pathway. These findings also provide supportive evidence that CPAP therapy may play a significant role in the primary prevention of hypertension in OSA patients, although further studies are required to confirm this possibility.
Footnotes
Submitted article, peer reviewed.
Conflict of interest: S.J. Crinion has nothing to disclose.
Conflict of interest: J. Kleinerova has nothing to disclose.
Conflict of interest: B. Kent has nothing to disclose.
Conflict of interest: G. Nolan has nothing to disclose.
Conflict of interest: C.T. Taylor has nothing to disclose.
Conflict of interest: S. Ryan has nothing to disclose.
Conflict of interest: W.T. McNicholas has nothing to disclose.
Support statement: This study was supported by Health Research Board grant HPF-2012-17. Funding information for this article has been deposited with the Crossref Funder Registry.
- Received May 18, 2021.
- Accepted June 9, 2021.
- Copyright ©The authors 2021
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