Muraja-Murro A, Kulkas A, Hiltunen M, Kupari S, Hukkanen T, Tiihonen P, Mervaala E, Töyräs J
Department of Clinical Neurophysiology, Kuopio University Hospital, P.O. Box 100, KYS, Finland,
Sleep Breath. 2014 Sep;18(3):641-7. doi: 10.1007/s11325-013-0927-z. Epub 2014 Jan 4.
Presently, the severity of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is estimated based on the apnea-hypopnea index (AHI). Unfortunately, AHI does not provide information on the severity of individual obstruction events. Previously, the severity of individual obstruction events has been suggested to be related to the outcome of the disease. In this study, we incorporate this information into AHI and test whether this novel approach would aid in discriminating patients with the highest risk. We hypothesize that the introduced adjusted AHI parameter provides a valuable supplement to AHI in the diagnosis of the severity of OSA.
This hypothesis was tested by means of retrospective follow-up (mean ± sd follow-up time 198.2 ± 24.7 months) of 1,068 men originally referred to night polygraphy due to suspected OSA. After exclusion of the 264 patients using CPAP, the remaining 804 patients were divided into normal (AHI < 5) and OSA (AHI ≥ 5) categories based on conventional AHI and adjusted AHI. For a more detailed analysis, the patients were divided into normal, mild, moderate, and severe OSA categories based on conventional AHI and adjusted AHI. Subsequently, the mortality and cardiovascular morbidity in these groups were determined.
Use of the severity of individual obstruction events for adjustment of AHI led to a significant rearrangement of patients between severity categories. Due to this rearrangement, the number of deceased patients diagnosed to have OSA was increased when adjusted AHI was used as the diagnostic index. Importantly, risk ratios of all-cause mortality and cardiovascular morbidity were higher in moderate and severe OSA groups formed based on the adjusted AHI parameter than in those formed based on conventional AHI.
The adjusted AHI parameter was found to give valuable supplementary information to AHI and to potentially improve the recognition of OSA patients with the highest risk of mortality or cardiovascular morbidity.
目前,阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停(OSA)的严重程度是根据呼吸暂停低通气指数(AHI)来评估的。遗憾的是,AHI并未提供关于个体阻塞事件严重程度的信息。此前,有研究表明个体阻塞事件的严重程度与疾病的预后相关。在本研究中,我们将此信息纳入AHI,并测试这种新方法是否有助于区分高风险患者。我们假设引入的调整后AHI参数在OSA严重程度的诊断中为AHI提供了有价值的补充。
通过对最初因疑似OSA而接受夜间多导睡眠监测的1068名男性进行回顾性随访(平均±标准差随访时间为198.2±24.7个月)来验证这一假设。在排除264名使用持续气道正压通气(CPAP)的患者后,根据传统AHI和调整后AHI,将其余804名患者分为正常(AHI<5)和OSA(AHI≥5)两类。为了进行更详细的分析,根据传统AHI和调整后AHI将患者分为正常、轻度、中度和重度OSA四类。随后,确定这些组中的死亡率和心血管发病率。
使用个体阻塞事件的严重程度对AHI进行调整导致患者在严重程度类别之间发生了显著重新排列。由于这种重新排列,当使用调整后AHI作为诊断指标时,被诊断为OSA的死亡患者数量增加。重要的是,基于调整后AHI参数形成的中度和重度OSA组的全因死亡率和心血管发病率风险比高于基于传统AHI形成的组。
发现调整后AHI参数为AHI提供了有价值的补充信息,并有可能改善对具有最高死亡风险或心血管发病风险的OSA患者的识别。