重症监护室睡眠数据人工评分中的评分者间分歧。

IF 1.6 Q2 MULTIDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES
Laurens Reinke, Esther M van der Heide, Pedro Fonseca, Anthony R Absalom, Jaap E Tulleken
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摘要

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Inter-rater disagreement in manual scoring of intensive care unit sleep data.

Objective: Severe sleep disruption is common among intensive care unit (ICU) patients. However, the applicability of standard sleep scoring guidelines by the American Academy of Sleep Medicine (AASM) has been questioned, with most polysomnography (PSG) studies in critically ill patients reporting difficulties in setting up and processing and scoring the recordings. The present study explores human inter-rater agreement in sleep stage scoring following the AASM guidelines, within a heterogenous ICU patient cohort.

Results: Two human experts independently scored a total of 51,454 epochs in 20 PSG recordings acquired at the ICU. Epoch-per-epoch comparison of scored stages revealed a Cohen's κ coefficient of agreement of 0.36 for standard 5-stage scoring. Highest agreement occurred in Wake (κ = 0.46), while REM showed the lowest (κ = 0.12). Significant correlations were found between inter-rater agreement, and Simplified Acute Physiology Score (SAPS II, r = - 0.506, p = 0.038), and 12-month mortality (r = - 0.524, p = 0.031). Comparison with similar studies underscore challenges in applying AASM criteria to ICU patients. Despite accounting for artifacts, disparities persisted, emphasizing the need for a nuanced exploration of factors influencing scoring inconsistencies in critically ill patients.

Trial registration: Trial was registered as "Sleep and biorhythm in the ICU", in the Centrale Commissie Mensgebonden Onderzoek register, with number NL-OMON43659 ( https://onderzoekmetmensen.nl/nl/trial/43659 ), on registration date august 4th 2015.

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来源期刊
BMC Research Notes
BMC Research Notes Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology-Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (all)
CiteScore
3.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
363
审稿时长
15 weeks
期刊介绍: BMC Research Notes publishes scientifically valid research outputs that cannot be considered as full research or methodology articles. We support the research community across all scientific and clinical disciplines by providing an open access forum for sharing data and useful information; this includes, but is not limited to, updates to previous work, additions to established methods, short publications, null results, research proposals and data management plans.
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