Sleep Medicine: X (Dec 2024)

Prospective evaluation of the impact of multi-channel studies on treatment outcomes in children with sleep disordered breathing

  • Michael Yanney,
  • Nicola Rowbotham,
  • Christabella Ng,
  • Muhammad Zulkifli,
  • Ahmed Shehata,
  • Alagappan Chidambaram,
  • Paraskevi Tsirevelou,
  • Neil Fergie,
  • Pathik Thakkar,
  • Emma Crookes,
  • Roy Dean,
  • Andrew Prayle

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7
p. 100111

Abstract

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There are significant variations in practice regarding the use of sleep studies in children with symptoms of sleep disordered breathing (SDB) prior to adenotonsillectomy. Current UK guidance recommends the selective use of sleep studies to confirm a diagnosis of obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) when there is diagnostic uncertainty, in children with comorbidities, or to assess perioperative risk when severe OSA is suspected. We have developed a novel paediatric sleep service over the past decade based on the routine use of multi-channel sleep studies (MCSS) before adenotonsillectomy. We present the results of a prospective evaluation assessing the impact of our service on treatment outcomes.We conducted a prospective service evaluation of 49 children with SDB seen between July 2021 and August 2022. We used medical records and a sleep study database to determine treatment outcomes. Otolaryngologists completed a questionnaire before each multi-channel sleep study to help evaluate the impact of sleep study findings on surgical decision making.Questionnaire responses before MCSS showed that clinicians thought 66 % of children were ‘likely’, ‘very likely’ or ‘definitely’ would require surgery but only 54 % of children underwent surgery following their sleep study. We estimate that the use of MCSS was associated with a 21 % reduction in children undergoing surgery in this small sample.We conclude that our use of MCSS facilitates conservative management, allowing a significant reduction in the number of children with SDB undergoing surgery, but further validation of MCSS against polysomnography is required.