Journal of Clinical Medicine (Apr 2022)

Sleep Disorders in Adults with Prader–Willi Syndrome: Review of the Literature and Clinical Recommendations Based on the Experience of the French Reference Centre

  • Pauline Dodet,
  • Federica Sanapo,
  • Smaranda Leu-Semenescu,
  • Muriel Coupaye,
  • Alice Bellicha,
  • Isabelle Arnulf,
  • Christine Poitou,
  • Stefania Redolfi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11071986
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 7
p. 1986

Abstract

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Prader–Willi syndrome (PWS) is a rare, genetic, multisymptomatic, neurodevelopmental disease commonly associated with sleep alterations, including sleep-disordered breathing and central disorders of hypersomnolence. Excessive daytime sleepiness represents the main manifestation that should be addressed by eliciting the detrimental effects on quality of life and neurocognitive function from the patients’ caregivers. Patients with PWS have impaired ventilatory control and altered pulmonary mechanics caused by hypotonia, respiratory muscle weakness, scoliosis and obesity. Consequently, respiratory abnormalities are frequent and, in most cases, severe, particularly during sleep. Adults with PWS frequently suffer from sleep apnoea syndrome, sleep hypoxemia and sleep hypoventilation. When excessive daytime sleepiness persists after adequate control of sleep-disordered breathing, a sleep study on ventilatory treatment, followed by an objective measurement of excessive daytime sleepiness, is recommended. These tests frequently identify central disorders of hypersomnolence, including narcolepsy, central hypersomnia or a borderline hypersomnolent phenotype. The use of wake-enhancing drugs (modafinil, pitolisant) is discussed in multidisciplinary expert centres for these kinds of cases to ensure the right balance between the benefits on quality of life and the risk of psychological and cardiovascular side effects.

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