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Surgical Treatment of Children With OSA and Small Tonsils or Down Syndrome

Sponsored by Oregon Health and Science University

About this trial

Last updated 7 months ago

Study ID

STUDY00023287

Status

Completed

Type

Observational

Placebo

No

Accepting

2 to 18 Years
All Sexes

Trial Timing

Ended 2 years ago

What is this trial about?

The purpose of this study is to prospectively compare the effectiveness of a novel personalized approach to the surgical treatment of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) in children, drug induced sleep endoscopy (DISE) directed surgery versus the standard adenotonsillectomy (AT). This will also serve to test the feasibility of recruiting families for a future randomized protocol comparing the same surgical techniques. It is the investigators' central hypothesis that a personalized DISE-directed surgical approach that uses existing procedures to address the specific fixed and dynamic anatomic features causing obstruction (ie, anatomic endotypes) in each child with small tonsils or Down syndrome will be superior to the currently recommended standard first line approach of AT. This novel approach may improve OSA outcomes and reduce the burden of unnecessary AT or secondary surgery for persistent OSA after an ineffective AT. To test this hypothesis, the investigators will study children aged 2 to 18 years with clinically small tonsils (Brodsky score 1+ or 2+ on a scale 1+ to 4+) OR Down syndrome.

What are the participation requirements?

Inclusion Criteria

* Moderate OSA (oAHI ≥ 5),

* Clinically small tonsils (Brodsky score 1+ or 2+) AND/OR Down syndrome

* Desiring surgical treatment.

* English or Spanish speaking

Exclusion Criteria

* Non-Down Syndrome neuromuscular disorder, craniofacial anomaly, genetic abnormality, subglottic or tracheal stenosis, tracheostomy dependence.