Comparison of diagnostic sleep studies in hospitalized neurorehabilitation patients with moderate to severe traumatic brain injury.

This study aimed to evaluate the non-inferiority and diagnostic accuracy of a portable Level 3 sleep study relative to Level 1 polysomnography in hospitalized neurorehabilitation patients with traumatic brain injury. STUDY DESIGN: and Methods: This is a prospective clinical trial conducted at six TBI Model System study sites between 05/2017 and 02/2019. Of 896 admissions, 449 were screened and eligible for the trial with 345 consented. Additional screening left 263 eligible for and completing simultaneous administration of both Level 1 and 3 sleep studies with final analyses completed on n=214 (median age=42; ED Glasgow Coma Scale=6; time to PSG=52 days). RESULTS: Agreement was moderate to strong (weighted kappa = 0.78, 95% CI = 0.72, 0.83) with the misclassification commonly occurring with mild sleep apnea due to underestimation of AHI. A majority of those with moderate to severe sleep apnea were correctly classified (n=54/72). Non-inferiority was not demonstrated: the minimum tolerable specificity of 0.5 was achieved across all AHI cutoff scores (LCL range = 0.807-0.943) but the minimum tolerable sensitivity of 0.8 was not (LCL range = 0.665-0.764). INTERPRETATION: While the non-inferiority of Level 3 portable diagnostic testing relative to Level 1 was not established, there was strong agreement across sleep apnea indices. A majority of those with moderate to severe sleep apnea were correctly identified; however, there was risk of misclassification w...
Source: Chest - Category: Respiratory Medicine Authors: Tags: Chest Source Type: research