Accuracy of clinical assessment of paediatric obstructive sleep apnoea in two English centres
Accuracy of clinical assessment of paediatric obstructive sleep apnoea in two English centres
Objectives: To ascertain the sensitivity and specificity of clinical diagnosis of obstructive sleep apnoea in children, and to determine if a published clinical algorithm identifies those at high risk of post-adenotonsillectomy complications.
Method: Sixty-seven children aged three to eight years underwent clinical assessment and overnight polysomnography.
Results: Polysomnography detected a significant apnoeahypopnoea index (i.e. ≥ 5, indicating significant obstructive sleep apnoea) in 13 (43 per cent) children with a clinical diagnosis of obstructive sleep apnoea and in six (19 per cent) children with no such diagnosis. The sensitivity of clinical assessment was 68.4 per cent and the specificity 59.5 per cent. The post-operative risk algorithm failed to identify any high risk children, although in actuality seven had severe obstructive sleep apnoea confirmed by polysomnography.
Conclusions: This study of two English centres confirms that the clinical diagnostic process for obstructive sleep apnoea is reasonably insensitive and has low specificity. The studied algorithm discriminated poorly between children with and without severe obstructive sleep apnoea. Realistic diagnostic screening guidelines for paediatric sleep apnoea are overdue in the UK, where access to polysomnography is limited.
Adenotonsillectomy, Clinical Diagnosis, Obstructive Sleep Apnoea, Polysomnography, Respiratory Complications, Risk, Sleep Disordered Breathing, Sleep Disordered Breathing Questionnaire
1002-1009
Sproson, E. L.
0566c7e7-0e23-4549-b37e-9e16cf810ee0
Hogan, A. M.
fca40672-6980-46b5-883f-e85b71cf07f1
1 September 2009
Sproson, E. L.
0566c7e7-0e23-4549-b37e-9e16cf810ee0
Hogan, A. M.
fca40672-6980-46b5-883f-e85b71cf07f1
Sproson, E. L. and Hogan, A. M.
(2009)
Accuracy of clinical assessment of paediatric obstructive sleep apnoea in two English centres.
Journal of Laryngology and Otology, 123 (9), .
(doi:10.1017/S0022215109005532).
Abstract
Objectives: To ascertain the sensitivity and specificity of clinical diagnosis of obstructive sleep apnoea in children, and to determine if a published clinical algorithm identifies those at high risk of post-adenotonsillectomy complications.
Method: Sixty-seven children aged three to eight years underwent clinical assessment and overnight polysomnography.
Results: Polysomnography detected a significant apnoeahypopnoea index (i.e. ≥ 5, indicating significant obstructive sleep apnoea) in 13 (43 per cent) children with a clinical diagnosis of obstructive sleep apnoea and in six (19 per cent) children with no such diagnosis. The sensitivity of clinical assessment was 68.4 per cent and the specificity 59.5 per cent. The post-operative risk algorithm failed to identify any high risk children, although in actuality seven had severe obstructive sleep apnoea confirmed by polysomnography.
Conclusions: This study of two English centres confirms that the clinical diagnostic process for obstructive sleep apnoea is reasonably insensitive and has low specificity. The studied algorithm discriminated poorly between children with and without severe obstructive sleep apnoea. Realistic diagnostic screening guidelines for paediatric sleep apnoea are overdue in the UK, where access to polysomnography is limited.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 22 May 2009
Published date: 1 September 2009
Keywords:
Adenotonsillectomy, Clinical Diagnosis, Obstructive Sleep Apnoea, Polysomnography, Respiratory Complications, Risk, Sleep Disordered Breathing, Sleep Disordered Breathing Questionnaire
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 439075
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/439075
ISSN: 0022-2151
PURE UUID: 597e8e23-0582-44d5-b8bc-266d20dbbc37
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Date deposited: 02 Apr 2020 16:35
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 07:22
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Author:
E. L. Sproson
Author:
A. M. Hogan
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