People with Sleep Apnea Live Longer on CPAP in Large, Late-Breaking ResMed-Supported ALASKA Study Presented at ERS
September 08 2021 - 6:45AM
People with Sleep Apnea Live Longer on CPAP in Large, Late-Breaking
ResMed-Supported ALASKA Study Presented at ERS
Using PAP (positive airway pressure) therapy as directed can
significantly increase sleep apnea patients’ chances of living
longer, according to a late-breaking abstract presented today at
the virtual European Respiratory Society (ERS) International
Congress 2021 and supported by ResMed (NYSE: RMD, ASX: RMD).
The landmark ALASKA study, “CPAP Termination and All-Cause
Mortality: a French Nationwide Database Analysis,” concluded people
with obstructive sleep apnea who continued PAP therapy were 39%
more likely to survive than OSA patients who didn’t.1 Researchers
observed over 176,000 people in France with sleep apnea over a
three-year period. Study authors say the survival rate gap remained
significant when accounting for patients’ ages, overall health,
other pre-existing conditions, and causes of death.
“Treating sleep apnea with PAP therapy may help you live longer;
that’s the key takeaway here for people with sleep apnea and their
doctors,” said Adam Benjafield, study co-author and ResMed Vice
President of Medical Affairs. “This finding underscores how
critical it is to identify the hundreds of millions of people
worldwide whose sleep apnea is undiagnosed and untreated.”
An estimated 936 million people worldwide have sleep apnea2 –
including over 175 million Europeans – but over 80% remain
undiagnosed.3
The ALASKA study was conducted in partnership with Professor
Jean-Louis Pépin; universities of Grenoble, San Diego, and Sydney;
Sêmeia; and other researchers from ResMed’s industry-academia
collaboration medXcloud.
ResMed at ERS
This study is one of fourteen ERS-accepted abstracts presented,
co-authored, or otherwise supported by ResMed, a global leader in
sleep and respiratory care research and digitally connected therapy
solutions.
On Tuesday, ResMed’s Benjafield presented the latest estimated
prevalence of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) in
Europe from 2020 out to 2050. The European analysis, modelled on
global burden of disease and world bank population data, reports
36.6 million Europeans have COPD as of 2020, and predicted
prevalence will rise 39.6% to approximately 49.5 million by
2050.4
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Our digital health technologies and cloud-connected medical devices
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1 Pepin JL et al. “CPAP termination and all-cause mortality: a
French nationwide database analysis.” ERS abstract, 20212
Benjafield AV et al. Lancet Resp Care 20193 Young T et al. Sleep
19974 Benjafield AV et al. “An estimate of the European prevalence
of COPD in 2050.” ERS abstract, 2021
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