P109 Predicting major adverse cardiovascular events using symptom subtypes of severe obstructive sleep apnoea

B. Shenoy, N. McArdle, J. Walsh, G. Cadby, D. Hillman, B. McQuillan, J. Hung, S. Dhaliwal, Subhabrata Mukherjee, L. Palmer, B. Singh
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Abstract

Abstract Background Obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) is a complex heterogeneous disorder, and patients with similar disease severity present with different symptom profiles and outcomes. It is unclear whether OSA symptom subtypes independently predict incident major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE). Method Consecutive patients attending a tertiary sleep clinic from 2006 to 2010 were prospectively investigated and linked to administrative health data. Data from 1,767 patients with severe OSA (apnoea-hypopnoea index ≥30 events/hour) were used in latent class analysis to identify symptom subtypes. Associations between symptom subtypes and incident MACE were assessed using Cox proportional hazards models, with adjustment for known cardiovascular risk factors. Results On average, patients were middle-aged (mean± SD 52.5±13.2 years), obese (BMI, 35.4±7.9 kg/m²), and male (71.7%). Four symptom subtypes were identified: high symptom burden: severe sleepiness (26.0%), high symptom burden: sleep onset insomnia (34.8%), moderate symptom burden (18.4%), and minimal symptoms (20.7%). Over a median follow-up of 7 years, 330 (18.7%) patients developed MACE. After adjustment for covariates, the high symptom burden: sleep onset insomnia subtype was associated with increased risk for MACE relative to those with moderate (HR, 1.59; 95%CI, 1.12–2.25; P=0.010) or minimal (HR, 1.47; 95%CI, 1.07–2.03; P=0.018) symptom burden. Discussion Distinct symptom subtypes can be identified among severe OSA patients. In symptomatic patients, those with a high prevalence of sleep onset insomnia were at increased risk of MACE, relative to those with moderate or minimal symptom burden. Our findings suggest that symptom subtypes may be clinically relevant in risk stratification for MACE in severe OSA.
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P109使用严重阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停症状亚型预测主要不良心血管事件
背景阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停(OSA)是一种复杂的异质性疾病,疾病严重程度相似的患者表现出不同的症状特征和结局。目前尚不清楚OSA症状亚型是否能独立预测主要不良心血管事件(MACE)的发生。方法对2006年至2010年连续在三级睡眠门诊就诊的患者进行前瞻性调查,并与行政卫生资料相关联。来自1767例重度OSA(呼吸暂停-低通气指数≥30事件/小时)患者的数据用于潜在分类分析,以确定症状亚型。使用Cox比例风险模型评估症状亚型与MACE事件之间的关联,并对已知心血管危险因素进行调整。结果患者平均为中年(平均±SD 52.5±13.2岁)、肥胖(BMI 35.4±7.9 kg/m²)、男性(71.7%)。发现4种症状亚型:高症状负担:重度嗜睡(26.0%)、高症状负担:睡眠性失眠(34.8%)、中度症状负担(18.4%)和轻度症状(20.7%)。在中位随访7年期间,330例(18.7%)患者发生MACE。调整协变量后,高症状负担:睡眠性失眠亚型相对于中度失眠亚型与MACE风险增加相关(HR, 1.59;95%置信区间,1.12 - -2.25;P=0.010)或最小(HR, 1.47;95%置信区间,1.07 - -2.03;P=0.018)症状负担。重度OSA患者可识别出不同的症状亚型。在有症状的患者中,与那些症状负担中等或最低的患者相比,睡眠性失眠症患病率高的患者发生MACE的风险增加。我们的研究结果表明,症状亚型可能与重度OSA患者MACE的危险分层有临床相关性。
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