• Respiratory care · Jul 2015

    Comparative Study

    Reliability of Apnea-Hypopnea Index Measured by a Home Bi-Level Pressure Support Ventilator Versus a Polysomnographic Assessment.

    • Marjolaine Georges, Dan Adler, Olivier Contal, Fabrice Espa, Stephen Perrig, Jean-Louis Pépin, and Jean-Paul Janssens.
    • Division of Pulmonary Diseases, Department of Medical Specialties.
    • Respir Care. 2015 Jul 1;60(7):1051-6.

    BackgroundVentilators designed for home care provide clinicians with built-in software that records items such as compliance, leaks, average tidal volume, total ventilation, and indices of residual apnea and hypopnea. Recent studies have showed, however, an important variability between devices regarding reliability of data provided. In this study, we aimed to compare apnea-hypopnea indices (AHI) provided by home ventilators (AHINIV) versus data scored manually during polysomnography (AHIPSG) in subjects on noninvasive ventilation (NIV) for obesity-hypoventilation syndrome.MethodsStable subjects with obesity-hypoventilation syndrome on NIV, all using the same device, underwent 3 consecutive polysomnographic sleep studies with different backup breathing frequencies (spontaneous mode, low and high backup breathing frequencies). During each recording, AHINIV was compared with AHIPSG.ResultsTen subjects (30 polysomnogram tracings) were analyzed. For each backup breathing frequency (spontaneous mode, low and high backup breathing frequencies), AHI values were 62 ± 7/h, 26 ± 7/h, and 17 ± 5/h (mean ± SD), respectively. Correlation between AHINIV and AHIPSG was highly significant (r(2) = 0.89, P < .001). As determined by Bland-Altman analysis, mean bias was 6.5 events/h, and limits of agreement were +26.0 and -12.9 events/h. Bias increased significantly with higher AHI values. Using a threshold AHI value of 10/h to define appropriate control of respiratory events, the ventilator software had a sensitivity of 90.9%, a specificity and positive predictive value of 100%, and a negative predictive value of 71%.ConclusionsIn stable subjects with obesity-hypoventilation syndrome, the home ventilator software tested was appropriate for determining if control of respiratory events was satisfactory on NIV or if further testing or adjustment of ventilator settings was required. (ClinicalTrials.gov registration NCT01130090.).Copyright © 2015 by Daedalus Enterprises.

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