# Baseline DISE Anatomy Predicts Jaw-Thrust Responsiveness in Obstructive Sleep Apnea

**Authors:** Wei-Hung Chang, Kuan-Pen Yu, Li-Kuo Kuo, Chung Lee

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/life16030456 · Life · 2026-03-11

## TL;DR

This study finds that baseline anatomy during a sleep test predicts how well jaw advancement improves airway obstruction in sleep apnea patients.

## Contribution

The study identifies baseline DISE anatomy as a stronger predictor of jaw-thrust responsiveness than traditional sleep apnea severity metrics.

## Key findings

- Jaw thrust significantly reduced obstruction at the tongue base and epiglottis during drug-induced sleep endoscopy.
- Baseline tongue-base collapse and multilevel obstruction burden independently predicted jaw-thrust responsiveness.
- Standard polysomnography severity metrics were not associated with jaw-thrust responsiveness.

## Abstract

Background: Drug-induced sleep endoscopy (DISE) with a jaw-thrust maneuver is used to simulate mandibular advancement in obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), yet determinants of functional airway improvement remain incompletely defined. Objective: To identify clinical, polysomnographic, and baseline DISE anatomic factors associated with jaw-thrust responsiveness. Methods: We conducted a single-center retrospective observational study of adults with polysomnography-confirmed OSA who underwent DISE with paired baseline and jaw-thrust VOTE assessments between 1 January 2015 and 31 December 2025 (n = 355). Jaw-thrust responsiveness was defined a priori as a within-subject reduction in the number of obstructed VOTE sites (grade ≥ 1). Multivariable logistic regression was used to identify independent correlates within a prespecified explanatory modeling framework. The study was approved by the Institutional Review Board of Taipei Tzu Chi Hospital (protocol 14-IRB079), with the need for informed consent being waived. Results: Jaw thrust reduced overall obstruction burden from two (two to three) to one (one to two) sites (Wilcoxon p < 0.001). Hypopharyngeal levels demonstrated the greatest improvement, particularly at the tongue base (39.2% to 7.6%) and epiglottis (23.9% to 5.4%) (both p < 0.001). Overall, 62.8% met responder criteria and 18.9% achieved complete normalization. In multivariable analysis (n = 272), baseline tongue-base collapse (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] 2.46, 95% CI 1.20–5.04) and greater baseline multilevel obstruction burden (aOR 1.85 per SD, 95% CI 1.19–2.85) were independently associated with responsiveness, whereas conventional PSG severity metrics were not. Conclusions: In adults with OSA, jaw-thrust responsiveness during DISE is more strongly associated with baseline anatomic phenotype than with global PSG severity. Standardized DISE functional assessment may provide complementary information to support phenotype-informed selection of non-CPAP therapies, pending prospective validation.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** obstructive sleep apnea (MONDO:0007147)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** OSA (MESH:D020181), tongue-base collapse (MESH:D014060)

## Full text

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## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13028060/full.md

## References

44 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13028060/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13028060