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Published in: Sleep and Breathing 4/2023

17-11-2022 | Sleep Apnea | Methods • Original Article

Reliability of respiratory event detection with continuous positive airway pressure in moderate to severe obstructive sleep apnea — comparison of polysomnography with a device-based analysis

Authors: Matthias Richter, Maik Schroeder, Ulrike Domanski, Matthias Schwaibold, Georg Nilius

Published in: Sleep and Breathing | Issue 4/2023

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Abstract

Purpose

Monitored polysomnography (PSG) is considered the gold standard technique to diagnose obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) and titrate continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP), the accepted primary treatment method. Currently, the American Academy of Sleep Medicine (AASM) considers automatic PAP therapy initiation at home comparable to laboratory titration and recommends telemonitoring-guided interventions. Advanced CPAP devices evaluate and report the residual apnea–hypopnea index (AHI). However, in order to control the effectiveness of the prescribed therapy outside of a PSG setting, the automatic event detection must provide reliable data.

Methods

A CPAP titration was performed in the sleep laboratory by PSG in patients with OSA. The residual event indices detected by the tested device (prismaLine, Loewenstein Medical Technology) were compared to the manually scored PSG indices. Results of the device (AHIFLOW) were compared according to the AASM scoring criteria 1A (AHI1A, hypopneas with a flow signal reduction of ≥ 30% with ≥ 3% oxygen reduction and/or an arousal) and 1B (AHI1B, hypopneas with a flow signal decrease by ≥ 30% with a ≥ 4% oxygen desaturation).

Results

In 50 patients with OSA, the mean PSG AHI1A was 10.5 ± 13.8/h and the PSG AHI1B was 7.4 ± 12.6/h compared to a mean device AHIFlow of 8.4 ± 10.0/h. The correlation coefficient regarding PSG AHI1A and AHIFlow was 0.968. The correlation regarding central hypopneas on the other hand was 0.153. There were few central events to be compared in this patient group.

Conclusion

The device-based analysis showed a high correlation in the determination of residual obstructive AHI under therapy. The recorded residual respiratory event indices in combination with the data about leakage and adherence of the studied device provide reliable information for the implementation and follow-up of CPAP therapy in a typical group of patients with OSA.
Trial Registration Number: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT04407949, May 29, 2020, retrospectively registered.
Literature
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Metadata
Title
Reliability of respiratory event detection with continuous positive airway pressure in moderate to severe obstructive sleep apnea — comparison of polysomnography with a device-based analysis
Authors
Matthias Richter
Maik Schroeder
Ulrike Domanski
Matthias Schwaibold
Georg Nilius
Publication date
17-11-2022
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Published in
Sleep and Breathing / Issue 4/2023
Print ISSN: 1520-9512
Electronic ISSN: 1522-1709
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11325-022-02740-w

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