Nocturnal polysomnography, the standard diagnostic test for sleep apnea, is an expensive and limited resource. In order to help identify the urgency of need for treatment, we determined which clinical features were most useful for establishing an accurate estimate of the probability that a patient had sleep apnea. Of 263 physician-referred patients, 200 were eligible for the study and 180 (90%) completed it. All patients had their histories recorded with a standard questionnaire, and underwent anthropomorphic measurements and nocturnal polysomnography. Sleep apnea was defined as more than 10 episodes of apnea or hypopnea per hour of sleep. Multiple linear and logistic regression models predictive of sleep apnea were compared with physicians' subjective impressions and previously reported models. Likelihood ratios were calculated for several levels of a sleep apnea clinical score produced by one of the linear models. Predictors of sleep apnea in the final model (R2 = 0.34) included neck circumference, hypertension, habitual snoring, and bed partner reports of nocturnal gasping/choking respirations. This model was superior to physician impression, slightly inferior to more detailed linear and logistic models, and comparable to previously reported models. A sleep apnea clinical score of less than 5 had a likelihood ratio of 0.25 (95% CI: 0.15 to 0.42) and a corresponding posttest probability of 17%, while a score of greater than 15 had a likelihood ratio of 5.17 (95% CI: 2.54 to 10.51) and posttest probability of 81%. These likelihood ratios can simply and accurately determined the probability of whether a patient has sleep apnea.
The Calgary Sleep Apnea Quality of Life Index (SAQLI) was developed to record key elements of the disease that are important to patients. All items felt to influence the quality of life of these patients were identified. Final questionnaire items were selected by interviewing 113 patients with sleep apnea and 50 snorers who rated each item on whether it was a problem and the importance of it to their overall quality of life. Items for the final questionnaire were selected based on the rank order of the frequency ximportance product. The rank ordering was similar across strata of disease severity and between sexes. The Calgary SAQLI has 35 questions organized into four domains: daily functioning, social interactions, emotional functioning, and symptoms. A fifth domain, treatment-related symptoms, can be added for clinical intervention trials to record the possible negative impacts of treatment. The SAQLI has a high degree of internal consistency, face validity as judged by content experts and patients, and construct validity as shown by its positive correlations with the SF-36 and the improvement in scores in patients successfully completing a 4-wk trial of continuous positive airway pressure. It includes items shown to be important to patients with sleep apnea and is designed as a measure of outcome in clinical trials in sleep apnea. Flemons WW, Reimer MA. Development of a disease-specific health-related quality of life questionnaire for sleep apnea.
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