Publication
Title
Endotypic mechanisms of successful hypoglossal nerve stimulation for obstructive sleep apnea
Author
Abstract
Rationale: Approximately a third of patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) treated with hypoglossal nerve stimulation (HGNS) therapy are incomplete responders, despite careful patient selection based on baseline characteristics and drug-induced sleep endoscopy. Here we use polysomnographic endotyping to assess the pathophysiological mechanisms underlying favorable versus incomplete responses to HGNS therapy. Methods: Baseline polysomnography data of the STAR trial were included. Raw baseline polysomnographic data from 91/126 patients were available for analysis. Traits—loop gain, arousal threshold, collapsibility, muscle compensation—were calculated from the baseline polysomnography data according to Sands et al. (AJRCCM 2018, SLEEP 2018). Logistic regression assessed AHI-adjusted associations between HGNS response (>50% reduction in AHI to <10/h at 1 year) and OSA traits. Results: Overall, HGNS treatment reduced AHI from 30.7 [24.9–39.9] to 8.5 [4.0–19.5] events/h (P<0.0001; median [Q1–Q3]); N=53/91 were responders. In adjusted analysis, a favorable response to therapy was independently associated with higher arousal threshold (OR [95%CI]: 6.76 [2.44-23.3], P=0.001), greater compensation (OR: 4.22 [1.70-12.55] per SD, P=0.004), and lower loop gain (in milder collapsibility, per significant interaction, P=0.003). The higher arousal threshold was evident in responders prior to adjusted analysis. Predicted responders had a ~4-fold lower treatment AHI versus predicted non-responders (4.9 [2.7–8.5] vs 20.7 [10.9–29.7], P<0.0001; median [Q1–Q3]); differences remained significant after cross-validation. Conclusions: Favorable responses to HGNS therapy are associated with the pathophysiological traits causing OSA, particularly a higher arousal threshold. Along with established criteria, individuals with favorable traits could potentially be prioritized for precision HGNS therapy.
Language
English
Source (journal)
American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine. - New York, 1994, currens
Publication
New York : 2021
ISSN
1073-449X [print]
1535-4970 [online]
DOI
10.1164/RCCM.202006-2176OC
Volume/pages
203 :6 (2021) , p. 746-755
ISI
000629650700019
Pubmed ID
32970962
Full text (Publisher's DOI)
Full text (open access)
Full text (publisher's version - intranet only)
UAntwerpen
Faculty/Department
Research group
Project info
The development of a multifactorial model to predict the outcome of mandibular advancement device therapy for obstructive sleep apnea based on the patients' phenotype.
Innovative pathophysiological phenotyping of obstructive sleep apnea patients for individualized therapy selection.
Mobile and technological solutions for occupational drivers (MILESTONE).
Publication type
Subject
Affiliation
Publications with a UAntwerp address
External links
Web of Science
Record
Identifier
Creation 22.02.2021
Last edited 29.12.2024
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