Disparities in polysomnography referral in a high-risk cardiac population.

IF 2.1 4区 医学 Q3 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Sleep and Breathing Pub Date : 2024-10-01 Epub Date: 2024-06-18 DOI:10.1007/s11325-024-03051-y
Kevin R Koss, Devesh Kumar, David R Friedland, Jazzmyne A Adams, Kathryn K Lauer, Ling Tong, Jake Luo, B Tucker Woodson
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Abstract

Purpose: Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is associated with metabolic, cardiovascular, and cerebrovascular comorbidities. Appropriate diagnosis and treatment of OSA might mitigate these comorbidities. This retrospective review sought to assess the impact of sex, age, race, ethnicity, and insurance status on polysomnography (PSG) referral rates.

Methods: An institutional STOP-Bang database of 299,320 patients was filtered for patients admitted to the hospital with an acute cardiac diagnosis between 2015-2020. A cohort of 4,735 patients were risk stratified by STOP-Bang (SB) score and correlations were made between PSG referrals and demographic and clinical variables (sex, age, race, ethnicity, and insurance status).

Results: Of the 25.3% of the cohort with high SB scores (5-8) only 21.3% were referred for PSG. Age and female sex were negatively associated with sleep study referrals (p < 0.001). No correlation was found between sleep study referral rates and race or ethnicity. No correlation was found between sleep study referrals and insurance provider. Admitting cardiac diagnosis significantly influenced sleep study referrals with diagnoses of arrhythmias and myocardial infarction being associated with an increased rate of PSG referrals compared to heart failure patients (p < 0.002).

Conclusions: Our study found no significant correlation between PSG referral rates and race, ethnicity, or insurance provider. However, we found low overall rates of PSG referral, with negative correlations between older age and female sex and a high-risk cardiac population. This represents a substantial missed opportunity to identify patients at risk for OSA, obtain a diagnosis, and provider adequate treatment.

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高危心脏病人群多导睡眠图转诊中的差异。
目的:阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停(OSA)与代谢、心血管和脑血管合并症有关。对 OSA 进行适当的诊断和治疗可减轻这些并发症。本回顾性研究旨在评估性别、年龄、种族、民族和保险状况对多导睡眠图(PSG)转诊率的影响:方法:对包含 299,320 名患者的 STOP-Bang 机构数据库进行过滤,以筛选出 2015-2020 年间因急性心脏疾病诊断入院的患者。根据 STOP-Bang(SB)评分对 4735 名患者进行了风险分层,并对 PSG 转诊率与人口统计学和临床变量(性别、年龄、种族、民族和保险状况)之间的相关性进行了分析:结果:在 25.3% 的 SB 高分(5-8 分)人群中,只有 21.3% 的人转诊进行 PSG。年龄和女性性别与睡眠检查转诊呈负相关(p 结论:我们的研究发现,年龄和性别与睡眠检查转诊无显著相关性:我们的研究发现,PSG 转诊率与种族、民族或保险提供商之间没有明显的相关性。然而,我们发现 PSG 转诊率总体较低,年龄较大和女性性别与高危心脏病人群呈负相关。这意味着在识别 OSA 高危患者、获得诊断和提供适当治疗方面错失了很多机会。
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来源期刊
Sleep and Breathing
Sleep and Breathing 医学-呼吸系统
CiteScore
5.20
自引率
4.00%
发文量
222
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: The journal Sleep and Breathing aims to reflect the state of the art in the international science and practice of sleep medicine. The journal is based on the recognition that management of sleep disorders requires a multi-disciplinary approach and diverse perspectives. The initial focus of Sleep and Breathing is on timely and original studies that collect, intervene, or otherwise inform all clinicians and scientists in medicine, dentistry and oral surgery, otolaryngology, and epidemiology on the management of the upper airway during sleep. Furthermore, Sleep and Breathing endeavors to bring readers cutting edge information about all evolving aspects of common sleep disorders or disruptions, such as insomnia and shift work. The journal includes not only patient studies, but also studies that emphasize the principles of physiology and pathophysiology or illustrate potentially novel approaches to diagnosis and treatment. In addition, the journal features articles that describe patient-oriented and cost-benefit health outcomes research. Thus, with peer review by an international Editorial Board and prompt English-language publication, Sleep and Breathing provides rapid dissemination of clinical and clinically related scientific information. But it also does more: it is dedicated to making the most important developments in sleep disordered breathing easily accessible to clinicians who are treating sleep apnea by presenting well-chosen, well-written, and highly organized information that is useful for patient care.
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