Obstructive Sleep Apnea: A Cluster Analysis at Time of Diagnosis

The classification of obstructive sleep apnea is on the basis of sleep study criteria that may not adequately capture disease heterogeneity. Improved phenotyping may improve prognosis prediction and help select therapeutic strategies. This study used cluster analysis to investigate the clinical clus...

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Published inPloS one Vol. 11; no. 6; p. e0157318
Main Authors Bailly, Sébastien, Destors, Marie, Grillet, Yves, Richard, Philippe, Stach, Bruno, Vivodtzev, Isabelle, Timsit, Jean-Francois, Lévy, Patrick, Tamisier, Renaud, Pépin, Jean-Louis
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Public Library of Science 01.06.2016
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
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Summary:The classification of obstructive sleep apnea is on the basis of sleep study criteria that may not adequately capture disease heterogeneity. Improved phenotyping may improve prognosis prediction and help select therapeutic strategies. This study used cluster analysis to investigate the clinical clusters of obstructive sleep apnea. An ascending hierarchical cluster analysis was performed on baseline symptoms, physical examination, risk factor exposure and co-morbidities from 18,263 participants in the OSFP (French national registry of sleep apnea). The probability for criteria to be associated with a given cluster was assessed using odds ratios, determined by univariate logistic regression. Six clusters were identified, in which patients varied considerably in age, sex, symptoms, obesity, co-morbidities and environmental risk factors. The main significant differences between clusters were minimally symptomatic versus sleepy obstructive sleep apnea patients, lean versus obese, and among obese patients different combinations of co-morbidities and environmental risk factors. Our cluster analysis identified six distinct clusters of obstructive sleep apnea. Our findings underscore the high degree of heterogeneity that exists within obstructive sleep apnea patients regarding clinical presentation, risk factors and consequences. This may help in both research and clinical practice for validating new prevention programs, in diagnosis and in decisions regarding therapeutic strategies.
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Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
The complete membership of the author group is provided in the Acknowledgments.
Conceived and designed the experiments: SB MD YG BS PR IV JFT PL RT JLP. Performed the experiments: SB MD YG BS PR IV JFT PL RT JLP. Analyzed the data: SB MD YG BS PR IV JFT PL RT JLP. Contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: SB MD YG BS PR IV JFT PL RT JLP. Wrote the paper: SB MD YG BS PR IV JFT PL RT JLP.
These authors also contributed equally and are joint senior authors on this work.
ISSN:1932-6203
1932-6203
DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0157318