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STOP-Bang 作为一种筛查工具对疑似阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停的临床转诊患者的鉴别能力:考虑性别差异。

The discriminative power of STOP-Bang as a screening tool for suspected obstructive sleep apnea in clinically referred patients: considering gender differences.

机构信息

MultiCare Institute for Research & Innovation, MultiCare Health System, Ste 402, 314 MLK Jr. Way, Tacoma, WA, 98405, USA.

Pulse Heart Institute, MultiCare Health System, Tacoma, WA, 98405, USA.

出版信息

Sleep Breath. 2019 Mar;23(1):65-75. doi: 10.1007/s11325-018-1658-y. Epub 2018 Apr 24.

Abstract

PURPOSE

Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is the most commonly seen clinical sleep disorder. STOP-Bang, a widely used screening tool, yields a composite score based on eight dichotomized items including male gender. This study was designed to validate STOP-Bang among clinically referred patients and tested alternative scoring designs on tool performance, with a focus on gender differences in OSA.

METHOD

STOP-Bang was administered to 403 female and 532 male subjects, followed by comprehensive sleep evaluation that included measurement of apnea-hypopnea indexes. Gender differences in STOP-Bang scores, OSA diagnosis, and severities were explored, and gender-specific alternative score cutoffs evaluated. Optimal operating points (OOP) were tested for female body mass index (BMI) and male neck circumference to inform STOP-Bang threshold refinement. Receiver operating characteristic curves were used to compare conventional and modified STOP-Bang.

RESULTS

STOP-Bang performance by gender showed extremely low specificity in males at the recommended cutoff of ≥3. Better utility was presented at a cutoff of 4 or 5 among clinically referred patients irrespective of gender differences. Screening performance was improved by modifying BMI and/or neck circumference thresholds using gender-triaged OOP estimation. Three gender-based model revisions outperformed conventional STOP-Bang.

CONCLUSION

Our study suggests that gender-specific consideration needs to be incorporated into the application of STOP-Bang in a clinically referred patient population with a higher risk of OSA. Alternative scoring systems may improve predictive performance of STOP-Bang.

摘要

目的

阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停(OSA)是最常见的临床睡眠障碍。STOP-Bang 是一种广泛使用的筛查工具,根据包括男性性别在内的八项二分项目得出综合评分。本研究旨在验证 STOP-Bang 在临床转诊患者中的有效性,并测试该工具在性能方面的替代评分设计,重点关注 OSA 中的性别差异。

方法

对 403 名女性和 532 名男性患者进行 STOP-Bang 评估,随后进行全面的睡眠评估,包括呼吸暂停-低通气指数的测量。探讨了 STOP-Bang 评分、OSA 诊断和严重程度的性别差异,并评估了性别特异性替代评分截断值。针对女性体重指数(BMI)和男性颈围,测试了最佳工作点(OOP),以完善 STOP-Bang 阈值。使用受试者工作特征曲线比较了传统和改良的 STOP-Bang。

结果

按性别划分的 STOP-Bang 表现显示,在推荐的≥3 截断值时,男性的特异性极低。在不分性别差异的情况下,在截断值为 4 或 5 时,具有更好的应用价值。通过使用性别分层的 OOP 估计值修改 BMI 和/或颈围阈值,可以提高筛查性能。三种基于性别的模型修订优于传统的 STOP-Bang。

结论

我们的研究表明,在临床转诊的 OSA 风险较高的患者人群中,需要考虑性别特异性因素来应用 STOP-Bang。替代评分系统可能会提高 STOP-Bang 的预测性能。

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