Modified scoring criteria to improve the accuracy of the home sleep apnea test
Philip Cushman, Amanda Radtke, James Kang, Aaron Burch, Zahari N. Tchopev, Matthew S. Brock, H. Samuel Scheuller

TL;DR
This study improves the accuracy of home sleep apnea tests by modifying scoring criteria to reduce false negatives and better align with gold-standard sleep studies.
Contribution
A novel modified scoring method for home sleep apnea tests using hyperpneas as a surrogate for arousals is introduced.
Findings
Modified HSAT criteria increased diagnostic concordance with PSG from 44.1% to 89.7%.
The mean AHI difference between modified HSAT and PSG was reduced to 3.7/hr from 5.9/hr.
False negative rate was reduced to 5% with the new criteria.
Abstract
The Home Sleep Apnea Test (HSAT) has good diagnostic performance for patients with a high pretest probability of moderate to severe obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). However, the false negative rate has been reported as high as 17%. Therefore, the American Academy of Sleep Medicine (AASM) recommends polysomnography (PSG) after a nondiagnostic HSAT (apnea–hypopnea index (AHI) < 5/hr). Our objective was to improve the accuracy of HSATs by using hyperpneas as a surrogate for arousals. A retrospective analysis was conducted on patients with non-diagnostic Type 3 HSATs with subsequent PSG. HSATs were re-scored using the AASM recommended hypopnea scoring including using post-hypopnea hyperpneas without relative desaturations as a surrogate for cortical arousals. The new AHI was then compared with the gold-standard PSG. We identified 68 patients (80.9% male) with a non-diagnostic HSAT and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsObstructive Sleep Apnea Research · Sleep and related disorders · Neuroscience of respiration and sleep
