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Journal Article

Citation

Senaratna CV, Perret JL, Lowe A, Bowatte G, Abramson MJ, Thompson B, Lodge C, Russell M, Hamilton GS, Dharmage SC. Med. J. Aust. 2019; 211(2): 65-70.

Affiliation

Centre for Molecular, Environmental, Genetic and Analytic Epidemiology, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, VIC.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, Australian Medical Association, Publisher Australasian Medical Publishing)

DOI

10.5694/mja2.50145

PMID

31049990

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To examine the utility of apnoea screening questionnaires, alone and in combination with the Epworth sleepiness scale (ESS), for detecting obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) in primary care. DESIGN, SETTING: Prospective validation study in an Australian general population cohort. PARTICIPANTS: 424 of 772 randomly invited Tasmanian Longitudinal Health Study, 6th decade follow-up participants with OSA symptoms (mean age, 52.9 years; SD, 0.9 year) who completed OSA screening questionnaires and underwent type 4 sleep studies. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Clinically relevant OSA, defined as moderate to severe OSA (15 or more oxygen desaturation events/hour), or mild OSA (5-14 events/hour) and excessive daytime sleepiness (ESS ≥ 8); diagnostic test properties of the Berlin (BQ), STOP-Bang and OSA-50 questionnaires, alone or combined with an ESS ≥ 8.

RESULTS: STOP-Bang and OSA-50 correctly identified most participants with clinically relevant OSA (sensitivity, 81% and 86% respectively), but with poor specificity (36% and 21% respectively); the specificity (59%) and sensitivity of the BQ (65%) were both low. When combined with the criterion ESS ≥ 8, the specificity of each questionnaire was high (94-96%), but sensitivity was low (36-51%). Sensitivity and specificity could be adjusted according to specific needs by varying the STOP-Bang cut-off score when combined with the ESS ≥ 8 criterion.

CONCLUSIONS: For people likely to trigger OSA assessment in primary care, the STOP-Bang, BQ, and OSA-50 questionnaires, combined with the ESS, can be used to rule in, but not to rule out clinically relevant OSA. Combined use of the STOP-Bang with different cut-off scores and the ESS facilitates a flexible balance between sensitivity and specificity.

© 2019 AMPCo Pty Ltd.


Language: en

Keywords

Primary care; Sleep apnea

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