Sara Camañes-Gonzalvo, Rocío Marco-Pitarch, Marina García-Selva, Carlos Bellot-Arcís, Vanessa Paredes-Gallardo, Susana Falardo, Amélia Feliciano, José María Montiel-Company
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Purpose: This non-randomized clinical study aims to identify polysomnographic phenotypic characteristics that differentiate responders from non-responders to mandibular advancement devices (MAD) treatment for obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) and to establish a predictive model of treatment response for OSA using oral devices based on the set of anthropometric, demographic, and polysomnographic phenotypic characteristics.
Methods: This study was registered under the identifier number: NCT02724865. It prospectively analyzed patients receiving MAD treatment for six years. The MADs used were two-piece adjustable appliances following a standardized protocol. Treatment response was defined according to the latest International Consensus Statement on OSA severity. The study analyzed polysomnographic phenotypes, categorizing them into positional phenotype, sleep-stage phenotype (REM/NREM-OSA), and airway collapsibility phenotype. A logistic regression model and a classification and regression tree were implemented.
Results: A total of 112 patients completed the study (64 responders and 48 non-responders). Positional-OSA patients had higher response rates than non-positional (64.1% vs. 35.9; p 0.032). REM-OSA and apnea-predominant phenotype showed a lower response (p < 0.001). In these phenotypes, most patients were women, with higher body mass index, higher scores in the Epworth Sleepiness Scale, lower minSaO2 in REM-OSA phenotype, and higher T90% in apnea-predominant phenotype.
Conclusion: This study underscores the importance of hypoxic burden in the severity of OSA. The parameters T90% and POSA formed predictive model. Additionally, MAD appears to be less effective in the REM-OSA phenotype. Moreover, although patients with an apnea-predominant phenotype responded less favorably, there was a conversion from apneas to hypopneas, reducing severity.
期刊介绍:
Official Journal of
European Union of Medical Specialists – ORL Section and Board
Official Journal of Confederation of European Oto-Rhino-Laryngology Head and Neck Surgery
"European Archives of Oto-Rhino-Laryngology" publishes original clinical reports and clinically relevant experimental studies, as well as short communications presenting new results of special interest. With peer review by a respected international editorial board and prompt English-language publication, the journal provides rapid dissemination of information by authors from around the world. This particular feature makes it the journal of choice for readers who want to be informed about the continuing state of the art concerning basic sciences and the diagnosis and management of diseases of the head and neck on an international level.
European Archives of Oto-Rhino-Laryngology was founded in 1864 as "Archiv für Ohrenheilkunde" by A. von Tröltsch, A. Politzer and H. Schwartze.