Abstract
The present study assessed the usefulness of home cardiorespiratory polygraphy as an alternative to overnight polysomnography for the diagnosis of sleep-disordered breathing in heart failure.
A total of 75 patients with chronic stable heart failure due to systolic dysfunction (left ventricular ejection fraction ≤45%) underwent polysomnography at the Virgen del Rocio Hospital and cardiorespiratory polygraphy at home. The two studies were performed in random order and within 30 days. The accuracy of polygraphical findings was determined by sensitivity and specificity obtained by area under the receiver operating characteristics (ROC) curves for apnoea-hypopnoea index (AHI) thresholds of ≥5, ≥10 and ≥15 in the polysomnography.
The area under the ROC curve for AHI ≥5, ≥10 and ≥15 was 0.896, 0.907 and 0.862, respectively. The diagnostic accuracy of polygraphy compared with polysomnography ranged 78.6–84%, with sensitivities of 68.4–82.5%, and specificities of 88.6–97.8% for the different AHI thresholds. Altogether, 29 patients had an AHI ≥10 (central pattern 24, obstructive pattern 5). Sensitivity and specificity of home polygraphy for identifying the sleep-disordered breathing pattern was 100%.
These data show that home cardiorespiratory polygraphy has a high sensitivity and specificity for the diagnosis of sleep-disordered breathing associated with heart failure.
- Central sleep apnoea
- diagnosis
- heart failure
- obstructive sleep apnoea
- portable devices
- sleep-disordered breathing
This study was supported by a grant from Consejería de Salud, Junta de Andalucía, Spain (154/00) and by Red Respira (RTIC 03/11, Fondo de Investigación Sanitaria, Instituto San Carlos III).
The prevalence of heart failure has increased consistently during the last 20 yrs mainly due to an increase in the survival of patients with acute myocardial infarction, and is a major health problem in Western countries 1. Despite recent advances in drug therapy, heart failure continues to cause high morbidity and mortality rates. It has recently been shown that sleep-related breathing disorders are common in heart failure. Approximately 40–50% of patients with stabilised left ventricular failure and adequate drug treatment may present with sleep-disordered breathing (SDB), including central sleep apnoea, commonly referred to as Cheyne-Stokes respiration (40%) or obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) (11%) 2–4. This association is particularly relevant due to the high prevalence of both conditions 5, 6 and the adverse prognostic implications of breathing disorders in heart failure 7, 8. Recent studies 9, 10 have provided important insight into the pathophysiology of sleep apnoea syndrome in patients with congestive heart failure, with potential therapeutic implications.
Conventional polysomnography 11 assesses the typical pattern of central sleep apnoea with Cheyne-Stokes respiration associated with heart failure, which consists of increasing-decreasing oscillations of the airflow alternating with central apnoeas followed by desaturations 12, 13. However, indications for sleep studies in patients with heart failure have not been definitively established 14, 15, and until other methods, such as home ambulatory monitoring 16, 17, are validated for this purpose, in-laboratory polysomnography remains the diagnostic tool of choice. The objective of this study was to determine the diagnostic accuracy of home cardiorespiratory polygraphy in the assessment of SDB in congestive heart failure and the ability to differentiate between central and obstructive respiratory events using standard polysomnography as a gold standard.
Methods
Patients
The authors studied, prospectively, patients of both sexes with stable heart failure due to systolic dysfunction (left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) ≤45%) who were followed at the outpatient clinic of the Service of Cardiology, Virgen del Rocio Hospital. Patients with stable congestive heart failure, defined as those presenting no changes in their symptoms and signs or in the medication dosage during the 4 weeks prior to the study, were consecutively recruited. To be included in the study, patients were required not to have had changes in the symptoms and signs of congestive heart failure, or in drug treatment doses in the 4 weeks prior to the study. Exclusion criteria were as follows: instability of heart failure during the study, acute myocardial infarction in the previous 3 months, unstable angina, congenital heart disease, and arterial oxygen tension <8 kPa (60 mmHg). Patients were contacted by a cardiologist to ask if they would consider taking part in the study. Subjects who agreed were evaluated to confirm their eligibility and underwent a radionuclide ventriculography to assess ventricular function. The study was approved by the Ethical Committee of the hospital and written informed consent was obtained from all participants.
All patients who fulfilled the inclusion criteria underwent a conventional overnight full-channel polysomnography in the sleep laboratory of the hospital as well as a domiciliary overnight polygraphy (unattended mode), whereby an experienced technician went to each patient's home to place the sensors and instruct the patient. The order to perform polysomnography and cardiorespiratory polygraphy was established at random, and the interval between both sleep studies was within 30 days. Analyses of recordings obtained by polysomnography and the readings of the polygraphy were performed by two independent observers who were blind to the results of the other method.
Equipment
The polysomnography consisted of continuous polygraphical recordings for a whole night from 22:00 h to 07:00 h with standardised equipment (Somnostar 4100; SensorMedics Corporation, Yorba Linda, CA, USA) with surface leads for electroencephalogram (C3/A2, C4/A1, O1/A2 and O2/A1 placements), electrooculogram, submental electromyogram, and electrocardiogram (V2). For respiratory sensors, nasal and oral signals by thermistors were used and the chest and abdominal effort was measured by two belt sensors (Healthdyne Technologies Inc., Marietta, GA, USA). Arterial oxygen saturation (Sa,O2) was recorded by digital pulse oximetry (sampling frequency of 5 s) and the body position was monitored by the system. Recordings were scored manually by an experienced neurophysiologist. Polysomnographical records were scored in 30-s epochs. A complete cessation of oronasal flow ≥10 s was defined as apnoea. Hypopnoea was defined as ≥50% reduction in respiratory airflow lasting ≥10 s and accompanied by a decrease of ≥4% from baseline in Sa,O2 and/or an electroencephalographical arousal 17. An arousal was defined according to the American Sleep Disorders Association 18. Each apnoea and hypopnoea was categorised in terms of obstructive or mixed (chest wall and abdominal movements present) and central (chest wall and abdominal movements absent). Cyclical breathing was considered when there were at least three consecutive periods of crescendo-decrescendo oscillation in airflow amplitude. Sleep data were staged according to the system of Rechtschaffen and Kales 19. The total number of scored apnoeas and hypopneas divided by the number ofhours of sleep (apnoea-hypopnoea index (AHI)) was determined for each participant. Above the AHI cut-off values, OSA was diagnosed if mixed and obstructive events represented >29% of all events. The presence of central sleep apnoea and Cheyne-Stokes respiration (CSA-CSR) was considered when central respiratory events accounted for ≥70% of the total respiratory events in association with characteristic periodical increasing-decreasing oscillations of airflow.
The overnight home polygraphy was performed using a portable ambulatory device (Apnoescreen II; Erich Jaeger Gmbh & CoKg, Wuerzburg, Germany) with monitoring of oronasal airflow (thermistor), chest and abdominal respiratory movements (thoracic and abdominal belts), Sa,O2 (digital pulse oximeter with a sampling frequency of 5 s), body position (mercury sensor), and wristband actigraphy. Analysis was carried out manually by an experienced pneumologist. Apnoea was defined as a complete cessation of airflow for ≥10 s, hypopnoea as ≥50% reduction in respiratory airflow accompanied by a decrease of ≥4% in Sa,O2 lasting ≥10 s. Cyclical breathing was defined in the same way as that in the polysomnography. The actigraphy was used to eliminate periods of obvious movements lasting ≥1 min. The respiratory disturbance index (RDI) was defined as the number of respiratory events (apnoeas and hypopnoeas) per h of recording. CSA-CSR and OSA were defined with the same criteria as that in the polysomnography.
Statistical analysis
The diagnostic accuracy of polygraphical findings was evaluated in terms of sensitivity and specificity, obtained through the receiver operating characteristics (ROC) curves according to different AHI cut-off points in the polysomnography (≥5, ≥10, and ≥15). The best cut-off point for balancing sensitivity and specificity of the test over the range of AHI thresholds was determined. To avoid inflating the data in favour of the portable device, the present study has taken into acount missing home studies in the analysis of sensitivity and specificity. Agreement between AHI (polysomnography) and RDI (respiratory polygraphy) was assessed using the method described by Bland and Altman 20. The discriminatory ability of home polygraphy monitoring for the diagnosis of central and obstructive respiratory events was evaluated by sensitivity and specificity analyses. Interobserver agreement was estimated by kappa statistic. The level of significance was accepted at a p-value of <0.05.
Results
A total of 90 patients accepted to participate in the present study. Altogether, 15 subjects withdrew before finishing the protocol (one died, two underwent a cardiac transplantation, nine suffered a descompensation of their heart failure, three withdrew consent). Therefore, the study population included 75 patients, 65 males (86.7%) and 10 females (13.3%), with a mean±sd age of 56.1±11.7 yrs. The mean LVEF was 29.3±9.5%, and 85.7% of patients were in New York Heart Association functional class I–II (table 1⇓). Seven home studies produced no interpretable data because of a total recording time of <3 h (n=2), disconnection of the thermistor (n=1), and failure of bands (n=4). There were no differences between patients with successful and unsuccessful studies regarding to age (56.3±11.9 versus 54.5±10.5) or LVEF (29.3±9.3 versus 29.4±11.6). The time interval between both sleep studies was 13.8±8.9 days.
Polysomnographical data of the 75 patients and polygraphical parameters of the 68 patients with valid home recordings are presented in table 2⇓. As previously mentioned, in the remaining analysis the lost polygraphical studies were also considered. According to polysomnographical data and using the AHI cut-off points of ≥5, ≥10, and ≥15, the frequency of SDB in heart failure was 53.3%, 38.6% and 25.3%, respectively. With the respiratory device, the diagnosis could be confirmed in 44% (33 of 75 patients), 30.6% (23 of 75 patients) and 17.3% (13 of 75 patients).
The areas under the ROC curve of respiratory polygraphical scores for the different AHI cut-off points of the polysomnography are shown in table 3⇓. The best result of the area under the ROC curve (0.907, 95% CI: 0.817–0.998, p<0.001) corresponded to the AHI cut-off point of ≥10. ROC curves for the different AHI cut-off points are depicted in figures 1–3⇓⇓⇓. When considering the AHI cut-off point of ≥5, the sensitivity and specificity obtained were 82.5% and 88.6%. Accordingly, 59 of the 75 patients were correctly classified (identification or exclusion with an AHI >5 or <5) with the polygraphical device, with a diagnostic accuracy of 78.6%. When considering an AHI cut-off point of ≥10, the respiratory polygraphical recordings showed a sensitivity of 79.3% and a specificity of 97.8% (correct classification 63 of the 75 patients, 84%). For an AHI cut-off point of ≥15, the sensitivity was 68.4% and the specificity was 94.6%. There were 60 patients (80%) correctly classified with respiratory polygraphy.
Post-test sensitivity and specificity values for the best RDI cut-off points identified in the ROC curves analysis (6.1, 8.5, 12.5) are presented in table 3⇑.
The mean of the individual differences between polysomnographic AHI and polygraphical RDI is shown in figure 4⇓. The mean value was 1.58±8.8 (95% CI: −0.57–3.73).
According to the results of polysomnography, 29 patients (38.6%) had an AHI cut-off point of ≥10 (mean AHI: 27.8±16.5), with central apnoea and Cheyne-Stokes respiration in 24 (82.1%) (mean AHI: 30.1±16.9) and obstructive apnoea in five (17.9%) (mean AHI: 16.3±8.3). Sensitivity and specificity of home polygraphy for detecting a central or obstructive pattern was 100%, with a total concordance between the two scorers (kappa coefficient=1).
Discussion
The presented results show that home cardiorespiratory polygraphy has a high sensitivity and specificity, using conventional polysomnography as a gold standard, for diagnosis of SDB associated with heart failure, as well as for discriminating between central and obstructive apnoea. In the current patient population, the diagnostic validity of polygraphical readings compared to polysomnography was very high as shown by the areas under the ROC curves for each AHI cut-off points (≥5, ≥10, and ≥15; 0.896, 0.907 and 0.862, respectively). Concordance between AHI values and polygraphical respiratory event indexes was also high, with a mean difference of 1.58 and only five cases out of theagreement range. Moreover, in 100% of cases, home cardiorespiratory polygraphy was able to identify the pattern of SDB (central or obstructive) that was present in the polysomnography.
The presence of SDB in heart failure has been shown in several studies. Two previous studies 3, 4 have shown a frequency of central sleep apnoea associated with Cheyne-Stokes respiration in heart failure of 33–41% for an AHI value ≥10, which is in the range of 33% found in the current study based on a population of ambulatory patients with stable heart failure, functional class I–II for 85% of them, and prospectively studied. Javaheri et al. 3 studied patients attending a Veterans Hospital and were thus likely to be elderly, male and have coexistent medical problems. With regard to OSA, a prevalence of 6% in the present study was <11% in the series of Javaheri et al. 3 and 31% in the series of Sin et al. 4, probably because patients with congestive heart failure and suspicion of OSA were studied. In contrast, Solin et al. 2 studied 75 patients with chronic heart failure and the incidence of central and obstructive apnoea was 32% and 11%, respectively. As in the study by Solin et al. 2, the patients in the current study were recruited consecutively from an ambulatory cardiological unit and they did not primarily complain of symptoms related with SDB.
There is a growing body of evidence that the mechanical, haemodynamic, autonomic, and chemical effects of central sleep apnoea and OSA place patients with heart failure at increased risk of accelerated disease progression 8, 21. However, sleep studies are not routinely considered in the evaluation of patients with heart failure. Moreover, polysomnography remains the tool of choice because other home ambulatory cardiorespiratory polygraphy systems have not been validated for this purpose 21. To date, there have been no studies assessing the accuracy of unattended cardiorespiratory polygraphy at home versus polysomnography for the diagnosis of SDB in congestive heart failure. In a previous study, Staniforth et al. 22 aimed to determine the prevalence of SDB within a UK heart failure population, and 41 patients underwent polysomnography to assess the validity of oximetry as a screening test for Cheyne-Stokes respiration. Home oximetry was a good screening test for Cheyne-Stokes respiration, with a specificity of 81% and a sensitivity of 87% for nocturnal desaturation of ≥15 dips per h. However, the desaturation pattern did not allow differentiation between central and obstructive events.
In recent years, cardiorespiratory polygraphy has been used as an alternative to polysomnography for the diagnosis of OSA. Validation studies of different cardiorespiratory monitoring systems in the sleep laboratory setting with overnight polysomnography performed simultaneously, have shown high sensitivity and specificity values 23. In contrast, validation studies of portable cardiorespiratory devices for domiciliary unattended sleep studies have shown variable values of sensitivity and specificity 24, 25. The current study was conducted to obtain relevant data on the accuracy of the home polygraphy for diagnosis purposes in a population with heart failure. In this case, the key question was whether portable monitoring at home could accurately diagnose SDB at a specific target level of pathology in patients with heart failure. Thus, a priori selected polysomnography and respiratory polygraphy thresholds of ≥5, ≥10 and ≥15 were chosen arbitrarily because, at the present time, the definition of SDB in these patients is still unclear. Although these thresholds have been specifically selected, the ROC curves permit the obtainment of other cut-off points in the polygraphy that improve either sensitivity or specificity. In the present study, the diagnostic accuracy of home polygraphy compared with polysomnography in patients with heart failure varied between 78.9–84%, with high sensitivities (between 68.4–94.6%) and specificities (88.6–97.8%) for all AHI cut-off points considered. These results are similar to those obtained for the diagnosis of OSA. In a study carried out with a similar methodology to that of the present study 26, ambulatory polygraphy showed a sensitivity of 73% and specificity of 80% for the diagnosis of OSA for an AHI ≥10 in the polysomnography.
Discrepancies between polysomnography and cardiorespiratory polygraphy performed at different nights for diagnosis of SDB may be due to different factors. First, a diagnostic limitation of polygraphy is that it does not allow the accurate determination of total sleep time, so that it is necessary to use total recording time as the denominator in the calculation of RDI. As a consequence the AHI may be underestimated, with the likelihood of false negative results, especially in mild cases of SDB 23. This probably explains that the specificity of polygraphy in the current series of patients with stable congestive heart failure was higher than the sensitivity. Secondly, there may be a temporal variability in the intensity of SDB when sleep studies are performed on different nights. In OSA, differences between two polysomnographies carried out within a short time interval are small, although there are some discrepancies in mild cases 27. In stable congestive heart failure changes of intensity of SDB along the time have not been assessed, although it may be assumed that they may be of a greater magnitude than in OSA since the haemodynamic, symptomatic, and therapeutic profile of congestive heart failure is not static. However, the present results do not seem to support this hypothesis given that agreement between both sleep studies was high and compares favourably with that obtained in similar studies in patients with OSA. In this respect, it should be noted that patients who had a descompensation of their disease during the study were excluded, so all the subjects who underwent both sleep studies were apparently stable.
Unattended domiciliary sleep studies have some potential advantages. On the one hand, the “first night” effect is prevented since the patient does not have to sleep in an unusual environment 28 and, on the other hand, an easier and cheaper diagnostic process is achieved. However, unattended techniques have some inconveniences, such as the loss of data related to the absence of a technician during sleep recording, which would counterbalance the potential savings as sleep studies have to be repeated. In the present study series, the percentage of invalidated recordings was 9%, which is similar or somewhat lower than in other studies of OSA that range 10–20% 29. Although it has also been discussed 30, some data suggest that unattended sleep studies at home are more favourable than an overnight polysomnography in the sleep laboratory in terms of cost-effectiveness, in the diagnosis of OSA 29. In the population of patients with heart failure, more studies are needed to determine potential savings of domiciliary sleep studies for diagnosis of SDB.
The classification of respiratory events as central or obstructive is important in the clinical context of heart failure given that the clinical significance of these patterns may be different. To quantify the respiratory effort, the most precise method is the measurement of oesophageal pressure by means of an intra-oesophageal catheter, but this is an invasive technique and difficult to perform in the daily clinical practice. In the current series, chest wall and abdominal movements were used for qualitatively estimating the respiratory effort, both in polysomnography and polygraphy, with a complete agreement in the classification of central or obstructive patterns. The present study employed thermistors to detect airflow, because other more accurate methods (such as nasal cannula) have not been used to date in unattended studies 24. There is no agreement about criteria for defining hypopnoea in the SRBD, which occurs in patientes with HF. Although in some studies desaturation is not required 4, in others a drop in baseline Sa,O2 is needed 3, 5. The last option was chosen because it could be safe to use corroborative data to define hypopnoeas by means of thermistor.
In summary, this is the first study that compares conventional polysomnography with unattended domiciliary cardiorespiratory polygraphy for the diagnosis of sleep-disordered breathing in patients with heart failure. In this group of patients with stable congestive heart failure, polygraphy showed a good sensitivity and a high specificity with respect to polysomnography, so that it may be a useful diagnostic tool for sleep-disordered breathing in heart failure.
Acknowledgments
The authors are indebted to M. Pulido for editing the manuscript and editorial assistance.
- Received December 18, 2003.
- Accepted May 12, 2004.
- © ERS Journals Ltd