Abstract

Although recent trials have shown promising benefits of exercise on obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) severity, the long-term effect of these interventions remains unknown. The aim of this study was to assess the effect of a 9-month community physical activity program on OSA severity one year later in free-living conditions. OSA patients, previously included in a 9-month randomized controlled trial (EXESAS study) evaluating the effects of supervised community physical activity on OSA severity, were invited to participate in an extra one-year observational study. Twenty-eight patients completed the study. Although OSA severity did not significantly worsen over the real-life period (9 to 21months of follow-up), reductions in apnea-hypopnea index (AHI) and oxygen desaturation index were no longer significant after 21months of follow-up compared to baseline (baseline AHI: 22.2±6.3 /h; 9months: 16.3±6.4 /h; 21months: 18.7±8.9 /h). Benefits observed at 9months on daytime sleepiness and mental health were preserved at 21months, whereas cardiorespiratory fitness slightly decreased. Per-protocol analysis revealed that patients who stopped exercise at 9months had worsened OSA severity compared to those who continued exercise during the real-life period (AHI: +9.0±8.8 vs. -1.3±5.3 /h; p<.01). In conclusion, our study suggested that improvements in OSA severity remain transient and is dependent on long-term adherence to regular physical activity practice.

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