Boynton Grace, Vahabzadeh Arshia, Hammoud Sami, Ruzicka Deborah L, Chervin Ronald D
Sleep Disorders Center and Department of Neurology, University of Michigan Health System, 1500 East Medical Center Drive, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
J Sleep Disord Treat Care. 2013 Sep 23;2(4). doi: 10.4172/2325-9639.1000121.
The STOP-BANG is a simple obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) screening tool, part questionnaire (STOP) and part demographic or physical measures (BANG), developed for use in preoperative surgical clinics. This study assessed sensitivity and specificity of the instrument among patients referred to a sleep disorders laboratory, and also its performance characteristics when BANG physical measures are patient-reported rather than measured.
Adults referred for diagnostic polysomnography completed the STOP questions and answered four yes/no questions (BANG self-reported) about their body mass index (weight and height), age, neck circumference, and gender, which were also assessed by laboratory technologists (BANG-measured).
Among N=219 subjects (mean age 46.3 ± 13.9 [s.d.] years; 98 [44.8%] males) the sensitivity of the STOP-BANG measured for an apnea/hypopnea index (AHI, events per hour of sleep) >5, >15, and >30 was 82, 93, and 97% respectively. Corresponding negative predictive values were 44, 87, and 96%. Specificities were comparatively low (48, 40, and 33%). The STOP-BANG measured and STOP-BANG self-reported scores showed essentially equivalent test characteristics against polysomnography.
The STOP-BANG appears to have limited utility in a referred, sleep laboratory setting. Negative results help to identify some individuals as unlikely to have moderate-to-severe apnea, and may thereby prove useful in identification of patients who would benefit more from laboratory studies than home studies. A STOP-BANG in which all information is self-reported may be as effective as the original version, and has potential to facilitate research or community screening where good negative predictive value is required for an effective screening tool.
STOP - BANG是一种简单的阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停(OSA)筛查工具,部分为问卷(STOP),部分为人口统计学或身体测量指标(BANG),专为术前外科诊所设计。本研究评估了该工具在转诊至睡眠障碍实验室的患者中的敏感性和特异性,以及当BANG身体测量指标由患者自我报告而非实际测量时的性能特征。
被转诊进行诊断性多导睡眠图检查的成年人完成了STOP问卷,并回答了四个关于其体重指数(体重和身高)、年龄、颈围和性别的是/否问题(BANG自我报告),实验室技术人员也对这些指标进行了评估(BANG测量)。
在N = 219名受试者中(平均年龄46.3±13.9 [标准差]岁;98名[44.8%]男性),针对呼吸暂停/低通气指数(AHI,每小时睡眠时间的事件数)>5、>15和>30时,测量的STOP - BANG的敏感性分别为82%、93%和97%。相应的阴性预测值分别为44%、87%和96%。特异性相对较低(48%、40%和33%)。测量的STOP - BANG分数和自我报告的STOP - BANG分数与多导睡眠图检查相比,显示出基本等效的测试特征。
在转诊的睡眠实验室环境中,STOP - BANG的效用似乎有限。阴性结果有助于识别一些不太可能患有中度至重度呼吸暂停的个体,从而可能有助于识别那些从实验室研究中比家庭研究中获益更多的患者。所有信息均为自我报告的STOP - BANG可能与原始版本一样有效,并且在需要有效筛查工具具有良好阴性预测值的研究或社区筛查中具有促进作用。