Causes and Treatment Options for Obstructive Sleep Apnea

The CPAP machine is a reliable standard of care solution for obstructive sleep apnea, but around half of patients are not able to use the device successfully. Brian Kinard, M.D., an oral and maxillofacial surgeon, and Kirk Withrow, M.D., director of saliva and sleep surgery, discuss the wide range of soft tissue and structural facial procedures that can either solve sleep apnea or make the CPAP feasible for patients. They explain their patient-anatomy-specific approach for selecting the appropriate procedure, be it nerve stimulation, a fabricated mandibular advancement device, or nasal surgery. Learn how their complex work is further enhanced by collaboration UAB Sleep Medicine colleagues to generate and interpret data guiding treatment and success.
Causes and Treatment Options for Obstructive Sleep Apnea
Featuring:
Brian Kinard, MD, DMD | Kirk Withrow, MD
Dr. Brian Kinard obtained his B.S. from the University of South Carolina Honors college and graduated with Harvard School of Dental Medicine with an Honors in Research in 2012. Dr. Kinard then completed medical school, and general surgery internship followed by residency in Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery at Emory University School of Medicine. 

Learn more about Brian Kinard, MD, DMD 

Dr. Withrow joined the Department of Otolaryngology where he currently serves as an associate professor. He received an undergraduate degree from the University of Kentucky prior to completing medical school at the University of Louisville. In 2008, he completed his otolaryngology residency training at UAB. 

Learn more about Kirk Withrow, MD 

CME Release Date:                  July 7, 2023
CME Expiration Date:               July 6, 2026

Planners:
Ronan O’Beirne, EdD, MBA | Director, UAB Continuing Medical Education
Katelyn Hiden | Physician Marketing Manager, UAB Health System
The planners have no relevant financial relationships with ineligible companies to disclose.
 
Faculty:
Kirk Withrow, M.D. | Associate Professor, Sleep Surgery, Head and Neck Surgical Oncology
Brian Kinard, DMD, M.D. | Assistant Professor, Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery
Drs. Withrow and Kinard have no relevant financial relationships with ineligible companies to disclose. There is no commercial support for this activity.
Transcription:

 Welcome to UAB MedCast,
a continuing education podcast for medical professionals, providing knowledge
that is moving medicine forward. Here's Melanie Cole.



Melanie Cole (Host): Welcome to UAB MedCast. I'm Melanie
Cole. And joining me, we have a panel today, Dr. Brian Kinard, he's an oral and
maxillofacial surgeon at UAB Medicine; and Dr. Kirk Withrow, he's the Director
of Salivary and Sleep Surgery in the UAB Department of Otolaryngology, and they
are here to highlight obstructive sleep apnea and the UAB Multidisciplinary
Sleep Surgery team that provides patients with CPAP alternatives.



Doctors, thank you so much for joining us today, Dr. Withrow.
I'd like to start with you. Can you just give us a little summary of the health
burden of sleep apnea and sleep disorders in general, and what is the scope of
what we're discussing here today?



Dr Kirk Withrow: Sure. As any provider would know, no
matter their practice, they're going to deal with patients with sleep apnea and
it affects a fairly staggering and seemingly increasing number of adults. And
particularly what we are concerned with, as far as Dr. Kinard and myself, are
the nearly 50% of diagnosed adults that are not able to go with the gold
standard of CPAP. So, it's a a very significant burden and we aim to try to
give those patients, who are not successful with that first line therapy, and
often case, alternatives. And the health consequences are significant, heart
disease increased, cardiovascular disease, strokes, peripheral vascular
disease, memory issues. And then, there's quite a significant quality of life
issue with daytime sleepiness, work performance issues, work accidents,
snoring, and household discord related to bed partners and sleeping and things
of that nature. So, it's a fairly consistent problem across the board.



Melanie Cole (Host): Well, thank you for that. So, Dr.
Kinard, what are some of the first line treatments and conservative measures
you would look to before surgical interventions are discussed? As Dr. Withrow
said, this is a huge burden on the individuals. It affects the quality of life.
Sometimes it's the partner who even notices it at first. Can you tell us what
you would do as a first-line treatment once you have determined that this is
what's going?



Dr Brian Kinard: Absolutely. I think the main struggle
for this patient population is mainly accurate diagnosis and referral to a
sleep medicine doctor. Once they are diagnosed with sleep apnea, as Dr. Withrow
mentioned, the CPAP appliance is the first line gold standard. This results in
good outcomes for a lot of patients. Unfortunately, the majority of patients
cannot tolerate this for more than four hours per night. It's often difficult
to use and burdensome to travel with. For these patients who fail CPAP therapy,
sleep surgery is a great alternative.



Melanie Cole (Host): Well then, Dr. Withrow, why don't
you tell us where in the line of apnea refractory to other interventions, and
obviously as Dr. Kinard just said, people don't really adhere to the CPAP that
well, so where in that line are other interventions discussed and what type of
surgical options? Speak a little bit about who sleep surgery can help. And
then, we'll look to Dr. Kinard, and we'll go back and forth about what that
surgery entails.



Dr Kirk Withrow: Well, I think sleep surgery can help
nearly anyone with sleep apnea. Now, certainly, the patients who it is most
applicable to are those who are intolerant or have failed CPAP. CPAP works
extremely well if you can use it. And so, I spend a good bit of time at the
beginning of my clinic visits making sure that patients understand that and
give it a fair go because a lot of people don't like it, but it does work well.



So once that has failed, that's when we really start
considering sleep surgery in most instances. There are a few exceptions where
patients may benefit from surgery upfront. But CPAP failure is mainstay in my
practice. We can do different things to help with CPAP, nasal surgeries to
improve nasal breathing and help CPAP compliance. And then, sleep surgeries,
from my perspective, I explain it to patients in three categories: with surgery
on the tissue in the throat, moving things around, removing things like
tonsils, palate surgeries, things of that nature; hypoglossal nerve stimulation
to keep the muscles from collapsing; or maxillofacial surgery to actually move
the skeleton like Dr. Kinard will do to make more room for the tissues that are
in the throat, and which of those is the ideal for each patient is highly
variable, and that's really where the crux of the whole situation comes in and
why it's so nice to have Dr. Kinard able to help from the craniofacial side of
things, because not every patient with sleep apnea can be treated with surgery
the same or from it. So, that's what makes it very complicated.



Dr Brian Kinard: I very much agree with Dr. Withrow.
This is a patient-specific anatomically-driven treatment plan. For my portion,
the maxillary advancement, as many as 20 to 30% of patients with sleep apnea,
their sleep apnea occurs secondary to a jaw abnormality. For these patients
with baseline small jaws or retrognathia, again limited airway space, limited
of room for their tongue and other soft tissue structures. For these patients,
my role is to expand the facial skeleton, which further expands the airway in its
entirety of length. For patients without baseline jaw deformities or who have
mild to moderate, sleep apnea, multiple other surgeries work well for them as
well that Dr. Withrow performs.



Melanie Cole (Host): Dr. Withrow, would you like to
expand on that? You and I have done a previous podcast on the hypoglossal nerve
stimulator. Why don't you give us a brief overview of that?



Dr Kirk Withrow: Well, and just to go back to patient
selection, there are things you can see, you know, when you walk in the room,
craniofacial abnormalities that would prompt me to discuss with patients and
refer them to Dr. Kinard. And of course, there are radiographic studies that
can take accurate measurements of these structures. And then, we'll often do a
sleep endoscopy, which is a short procedure with sedation that really tries to
give us a more patient-specific look at what is actually collapsing, so that we
can develop a more accurate patient-centered plan. It allows us to determine
whether a patient would likely respond to a hypoglossal nerve stimulator. And
it helps us to pick certain procedures, say, for the palate or the tongue. And
in other instances, it can reinforce my thinking that they need maxillofacial
surgery because I explain it to patients in that I can only move tissue as much
as the skeleton allows it. And if the box is too small, then I can't really do
too much there. And so, my chance of getting them a good outcome is diminished.



But as far as the other options, hypoglossal stimulation is one
of the nice new options that we have, because it has less morbidity by far than
any of our other options. Now, unfortunately, it doesn't work for every single
patient, but it is a very effective option. And once we confirm patients are
good candidates, you know, we will get 85% or so reduction in severity, which
is getting close to what we can see in the maxillomandibular advancement
literature, which is certainly one of our most effective procedures. So, it's
been nice because it just gives us a lot more options to treat patients and has
really, in my practice, resulted in a lot more patient engagement, because they
are inclined to seek care to see what their options are when they learn about
some of these newer options.



Dr Brian Kinard: That's great, Dr. Withrow. I think
another great point of the modern sleep apnea protocol or the algorithm is that
it's not unidirectional. So, some of these patients I work with Dr. Withdrow
on, they may not initially qualify for Inspire. They'll come to my clinic for
an MMA or maxillomandibular advancement. It will take care of most of their
sleep apnea. But then, they'll probably have residual sleep apnea, now, they no
longer have concentric collapse and now they're qualified for Inspire. So, it's
not a unidirectional pathway by any means, which just helps the team
environment.



Dr Kirk Withrow: We certainly should include our sleep
medicine colleagues because they play a role as well, even when they have a
patient who's CPAP intolerant or CPAP failure. There are many times when I
might do a surgery and improve it, but again, still some residual apnea and now
they're able to use CPAP. And so, working with the sleep medicine folks is
hugely beneficial because they hold the data for us to know what their severity
is. And so, it's a very crucial thing. And at UAB, we're just very fortunate to
have a very open dialogue with the sleep medicine folks with respect to sleep
surgery because it's not like that everywhere, unfortunately.



Melanie Cole (Host): Along the lines of not like that
everywhere because you are specialists and incredible expertise, Dr. Kinard, in
your department, they fabricate mandibular advancement devices. Can you speak a
little bit about that and which patients should consider these types of
devices?



Dr Brian Kinard: We have a maxillofacial prosthodontist
in our department, his name is Dr. Kase. And one of the many things that he
does for our patient population is fabricate the mandibular advancement
devices. These devices can help patients with mild to moderate apnea who are CPAP
intolerant, who aren't quite ready to undergo a surgery. The mandibular
advancement device sits on your teeth and mechanically positions your bottom
jaw forward to open the airway behind your tongue. This does have some side
effects, however. It can cause muscle pain, sometimes tooth movement, and it's
limited to just advancements of approximately four to five milimeters compared
to the MMA, which can advance a person's jaws 10 to 15 millimeters if needed.
So for the right patients, it's a great minimally invasive tool to improve
their sleep apnea.



Melanie Cole (Host): I'd love to give you each a chance
for a final thought. And Dr. Withrow, please tell other providers why they
should choose UAB for sleep surgery and when and why it's so important that they
refer to the experts at UAB Medicine.



Dr Kirk Withrow: Sure. We have multiple providers that
basically cover all possible treatment options for sleep apnea. And I think
while Dr. Kinard does maxillomandibular advancement and orthognathic surgery,
and I do nerve stimulation and soft tissue surgeries primarily, and our sleep
medicine folks are primarily dealing with CPAP, every one of us knows about the
other option and keeps in mind. I'm by no means would recommend one of my
surgeries to a patient if I felt like they were going to get a better outcome
with Dr. Kinard's operation, and I think he would probably say the same.



And the same goes with our sleep medicine folks. They try CPAP
and we encourage CPAP. But when it fails, we keep an open mind that it's really
just what can get improvement for the patients. And so, I think having all of
those options in one institution, in a pretty open dialogue and free flow
between all of them is very nice for patients because they don't get lost on an
island if, say, nerve stimulation isn't their best chance, then they're kind of
back to where they started with no therapy. I'm going to give them something
and it might not be a procedure I have. It might be with Dr. Kinard or with Dr.
Kase and an oral appliance or back to sleep medicine if I feel like there's a
way we can use positive airway pressure. So, I think that approach makes it
nice because in that sense, not at my clinic necessarily, but at UAB, it's kind
of a one-stop shop where if one thing doesn't work or isn't the best, you're
going to get referred to someone else who has the expertise in what should work
the best.



Melanie Cole (Host): And Dr. Kinard, last word to you,
please speak about that multidisciplinary approach, which is so important, and
that comprehensive program that you have at UAB Medicine, anything you would
like to summarize and the key takeaways from this podcast.



Dr Brian Kinard: We're so fortunate at UAB to have such
experts in the field of sleep surgery, such a collaborative team environment
who are really focused on taking care of these patients. Each patient gets a
patient specific treatment plan based on their anatomy and sleep history. And
as a team, we come together to treat these patients in the best way possible.



Melanie Cole (Host): Thank you both so much. What a
great topic and such important information. Thank you for joining us. And for
more information or to refer a patient to UAB Medicine, you can call the MIST
line at 1-800-UAB-MIST, or you can visit our website at uabmedicine.org/physician.
That concludes this episode of UAB MedCast. I'm Melanie Cole.