Correspondence: Sean Hesselbacher(Hesselse@evms.edu)
aEastern Virginia Medical School, Norfolk
bHampton Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Virginia
Author contributions
All authors approved the final manuscript. Conceptualization, methodology, visualization: Hesselbacher, Nye. Investigation, writing original draft: Nye. Data curation, formal analysis, writing review & editing, supervision: Hesselbacher.
Author disclosures
The authors report no actual or potential conflicts of interest or outside sources of funding with regard to this article.
Disclaimer
The opinions expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of Federal Practitioner, Frontline Medical Communications Inc., the US Government, or any of its agencies. This article may discuss unlabeled or investigational use of certain drugs. Please review the complete prescribing information for specific drugs or drug combinations—including indications, contraindications, warnings, and adverse effects—before administering pharmacologic therapy to patients.
Ethics and consent
This study was determined to be exempt by the Hampton Veterans Affairs Medical Center Institutional Review Board (protocol #20-01).
This retrospective, single-center study may have limited applicability to other populations. Adherence was used as a surrogate for subjective benefit from treatment, though benefit was not confirmed by the patients directly. Only patients seen in follow-up for documentation of the ASV download were identified for inclusion and data analysis. As a single center, we risk homogeneity in the treatment algorithms, though sleep medicine treatments are often decided at the time of the sleep studies. Studies and treatment recommendations were made at a variety of sites, including our sleep center, other US Department of Veterans Affairs hospitals, in the community network, and at US Department of Defense centers. Our population was homogenous in some ways; notably, 100% of our group was male, which is substantially higher than both the veteran population and the general population. Risk factors for OSA and CSA are more common in male patients, which may partially explain this anomaly. Lastly, with our small sample size, there is increased risk that the results seen occurred by chance.
There are several areas for further study. A larger multicenter study may permit these results to be generalized to the population and should include subjective measures of benefit. Patients with primarily CSA were largely absent in our group and may be the focus of future studies; data on predictors of treatment adherence in CSA are lacking. With the availability of consistent older adherence data, comparisons may be made between the efficacies of clinical practice habits, including treatment efficacy, before and after the results of the SERVE-HF trial became known.
Conclusions
In selected patients with preserved LVEF, ASV therapy appears especially effective in patients with OSA combined with CSA. Adherence to ASV treatment was associated with higher obstructive AHI during the baseline PSG and with a greater reduction in the AHI. This understanding may help guide sleep specialists in personalizing treatments for sleep-disordered breathing. Because objective efficacy appears to be important for therapy adherence, clinicians should be able to consistently determine the obstructive and central components of the residual AHI, thus taking all information into account when optimizing the treatment. Additionally, both OSA and CSA pressure requirements should be considered when developing ASV devices.
Acknowledgments
We thank Martha Harper, RRT, of Hampton Veterans Affairs Medical Center (HVAMC) for helping to identify our patients and assisting with data collection. This material is the result of work supported with resources and the use of HVAMC facilities.