1. Screening for obstructive sleep apnoea in post‐treatment cancer patients
- Author
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Harini Subramanian, Veronika Fuchsova, Elisabeth Elder, Alison Brand, Julie Howle, Anna DeFazio, Graham J. Mann, Terence Amis, and Kristina Kairaitis
- Subjects
breast cancer ,cancer outcomes ,endometrial cancer ,melanoma ,screening ,sleep apnea ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background and aims For cancer patients, comorbid obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) poses additional risk to their surgical/anaesthetic outcomes, quality of life, and survival. However, OSA screening is not well‐established in oncology settings. We tested two screening tools (STOP‐Bang questionnaire [SBQ] and the at‐home monitoring device, ApneaLink™Air), for predicting polysomnography (PSG) confirmed OSA in post‐treatment cancer patients. Methods Breast (n = 56), endometrial (n = 37) and melanoma patients (n = 50) were recruited from follow‐up clinics at Westmead Hospital (Sydney, Australia). All underwent overnight PSG, 137 completed SBQ, and 99 completed ApneaLink™Air. Positive (PPV) and negative (NPV) predictive values for PSG‐determined moderate‐to‐severe OSA and severe OSA, were calculated using an SBQ threshold ≥3 au and ApneaLink™Air apnoea‐hypopnea index thresholds of ≥10, ≥15 and ≥30 events/h. Results Both SBQ and ApneaLink™Air had high NPVs (92.7% and 85.2%–95.6% respectively) for severe OSA, but NPVs were lower for moderate‐to‐severe OSA (69.1% and 59.1%–75.5%, respectively). PPV for both tools were relatively low (all
- Published
- 2023
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