This study is testing whether a new type of home oxygen therapy, called high-flow nasal cannula (HFNC), can improve breathing comfort and quality of life for people with long-term lung or heart conditions who need oxygen after leaving the hospital. HFNC delivers warm, humidified oxygen at higher flow rates than standard oxygen therapy, which may reduce shortness of breath, improve sleep, and make daily activities easier. The therapy will be provided using the myAirvo™3 device, which also allows doctors to check patients' oxygen levels, heart rate, and symptoms remotely. All patients will also wear a small device (RootiREX) to monitor heart rhythm, sleep quality, and detect breathing pauses at night. Participants will try both treatments - HFNC and standard oxygen therapy - for short periods, in random order, so that researchers can directly compare the effects within the same patient. Each treatment period will last two weeks, with a short break in between. The main goal of the study is to see whether HFNC reduces shortness of breath (measured by the modified Medical Research Council scale). Other outcomes include comfort, sleep quality, quality of life, oxygen levels, and how well patients are able to use the devices at home. The study will last six weeks in total for each participant. Researchers expect that HFNC will improve breathing comfort, stabilize oxygen levels, and reduce the need for hospital visits during this time.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
16
Type: Device / Procedure Description: Humidified high-flow nasal cannula oxygen therapy delivered via a home device. Provides warmed (37°C), humidified air and supplemental oxygen at ≥30 L/min, titrated to maintain oxygen saturation (SpO₂) ≥92%. Patients are instructed to use the device for ≥8 hours per day, preferably overnight. Special Features: Integrated remote monitoring system that automatically records flow, FiO₂, SpO₂, heart rate, and usage time, transmitting data to a secure cloud platform for clinical follow-up.
Type: Device / Procedure Description: Standard long-term oxygen therapy delivered through conventional low-flow systems (e.g., nasal cannula or mask). Oxygen is titrated to maintain oxygen saturation (SpO₂) ≥92%. Patients are instructed to use oxygen for ≥8 hours per day, preferably overnight. Special Features: No humidification, high-flow delivery, or remote monitoring capabilities.
dyspnea modification
Change from the enrollment in the study to 6 weeks in dyspnea level measured by the modified Medical Research Council (mMRC) scale
Time frame: Change from the enrollment in the study to 6 weeks
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