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Challenges and perspectives in obstructive sleep apnoea: Report by an ad hoc working group of the Sleep Disordered Breathing Group of the European Respiratory Society and the European Sleep Research Society

Authors :
Ramon Farré
Josep M. Montserrat
Winfried Randerath
Claudio L. Bassetti
Johan Verbraecken
Malcolm Kohler
Maria R. Bonsignore
Walter T. McNicholas
Jean-Louis Pépin
Ludger Grote
Stefan Mihaicuta
Olli Polo
Fabio Pizza
Jan Hedner
Silke Ryan
Dirk Pevernagie
Luigi Ferini-Strambi
Miguel Ángel Martínez-García
Renata L. Riha
Randerath, Winfried
Bassetti, Claudio L
Bonsignore, Maria R
Farre, Ramon
Ferini-Strambi, Luigi
Grote, Ludger
Hedner, Jan
Kohler, Malcolm
Martinez-Garcia, Miguel-Angel
Mihaicuta, Stefan
Montserrat, Josep
Pepin, Jean-Loui
Pevernagie, Dirk
Pizza, Fabio
Polo, Olli
Riha, Renata
Ryan, Silke
Verbraecken, Johan
McNicholas, Walter T
Source :
The European respiratory journal
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) is a major challenge for physicians and healthcare systems throughout the world. The high prevalence and the impact on daily life of OSA oblige clinicians to offer effective and acceptable treatment options. However, recent evidence has raised questions about the benefits of positive airway pressure therapy in ameliorating comorbidities.An international expert group considered the current state of knowledge based on the most relevant publications in the previous 5 years, discussed the current challenges in the field, and proposed topics for future research on epidemiology, phenotyping, underlying mechanisms, prognostic implications and optimal treatment of patients with OSA.The group concluded that a revision to the diagnostic criteria for OSA is required to include factors that reflect different clinical and pathophysiological phenotypes and relevant comorbidities (e.g.nondipping nocturnal blood pressure). Furthermore, current severity thresholds require revision to reflect factors such as the disparity in the apnoea–hypopnoea index (AHI) between polysomnography and sleep studies that do not include sleep stage measurements, in addition to the poor correlation between AHI and daytime symptoms such as sleepiness. Management decisions should be linked to the underlying phenotype and consider outcomes beyond AHI.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09031936
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The European respiratory journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....58668dee47b8d481d97481450a3d103b