Long-Term Use of CPAP Therapy For Sleep Apnea/Hypopnea Syndrome
Long-Term Use of CPAP Therapy For Sleep Apnea/Hypopnea Syndrome
Long-Term Use of CPAP Therapy For Sleep Apnea/Hypopnea Syndrome
Apnea/Hypopnea Syndrome
NIGEL MCARDLE, GRAHAM DEVEREUX, HASSAN HEIDARNEJAD, HEATHER M. ENGLEMAN,
THOMAS W. MACKAY, and NEIL J. DOUGLAS
Respiratory Medicine Unit, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom
Patients with the sleep apnea/hypopnea syndrome (SAHS) treated by nasal continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) need to use CPAP long-term to prevent recurrence of symptoms. It is thus important to clarify the level of long-term CPAP use and the factors influencing long-term use. We examined determinants of objective CPAP use in 1,211 consecutive patients with SAHS who were
prescribed a CPAP trial between 1986 and 1997. Prospective CPAP use data were available in 1,155
(95.4%), with a median follow-up of 22 mo (interquartile range [IQR], 12 to 36 mo). Fifty-two (4.5%)
patients refused CPAP treatment (these were more often female and current smokers); 1,103 patients took CPAP home, and during follow-up 20% stopped treatment, primarily because of a lack of
benefit. Methods of survival analysis showed that 68% of patients continued treatment at 5 yr. Independent predictors of long-term CPAP use were snoring history, apnea/hypopnea index (AHI), and
Epworth score; 86% of patients with Epworth . 10 and an AHI > 30 were still using CPAP at 3 yr. Average nightly CPAP use within the first 3 mo was strongly predictive of long-term use. We conclude
that long-term CPAP use is related to disease severity and subjective sleepiness and can be predicted
within 3 mo. McArdle N, Devereux G, Heidarnejad H, Engleman HM, Mackay TW, Douglas NJ.
Long-term use of CPAP therapy for sleep apnea/hypopnea syndrome.
AM J RESPIR CRIT CARE MED 1999;159:11081114.
METHODS
Patients
All patients booked for a CPAP titration night between January 1986
and February 1997 at the Scottish National Sleep Center were studied.
Data were obtained from review of all clinical records, patient and
spouse questionnaires completed at the time of the original consultation, sleep study results, and objective CPAP use records. Patients
with kyphoscoliosis or neuromuscular disorders were excluded, but
patients with SAHS were not excluded if there was coexisting chronic
obstructive airway disease if CPAP alone was the modality of treatment chosen.
Diagnosis
Patients were evaluated for possible SAHS by clinical interview and
examination with involvement of a physician experienced in sleep
medicine. Results of an overnight sleep study as well as pulmonary
function tests, chest radiography, and at times other investigations
such as a multiple sleep latency test (MSLT) were reviewed prior to
deciding on the need for CPAP treatment. The decision to treat was
based on the presence of at least two major symptoms of the SAHS
(18) and an appropriate sleep study demonstrating an abnormal num-
Statistical Analysis
Statistical analysis was performed using the STATA Release 4 statistical package (Computing Resource Center, Santa Monica, CA). Nonparametric methods (Mann-Whitney U test, chi-square, Spearmans rank
correlation) were used in the basic descriptive statistical analyses because the variables measured were either dichotomous or categorical,
or did not approximate to a normal distribution. The primary dependent variable of interest was possession and continued use of a CPAP
machine. The methods of survival analyses (Kaplan-Meier) were used
(20) to allow for variable follow-up times. Additionally, the methods
of Kaplan-Meier allow use of censored data, so that all information
gathered up to the time of a censored event can be used. Death, transfer of care, and loss to follow-up were entered as censored variables. This provides maximal use of available data because survival
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information can be analyzed even though the event of interest (deliberate stopping of CPAP treatment) is never reached (20). Univariate
analyses (log-rank test) were used to identify possible explanatory
variables influencing continued CPAP use. To explore the independent effects of explanatory variables Coxs proportional hazards model
was used (20, 21) and expressed as hazard ratios. The use of Coxs
method for survival analysis is analogous to the use of multiple regression as an extension of linear regression. Kaplan-Meier analysis allows
the use of both continuous and categorical data. For simplicity and
relevance to clinical practice, many of the results have been presented
using categorical data.
The study had the approval of the local ethics advisory committee.
RESULTS
Study Population
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TABLE 1
BASELINE DATA ON PATIENTS REFUSING CPAP COMPARED
WITH PATIENTS TAKING CPAP HOME
Patients, n
Female, %
Median age, yr
Median BMI, kg/m2
Median AHI, events/h slept
Median arousals events/h slept
Median Epworth score
Current smoker, %
Median alcohol consumption, units/wk
Hospital referral, %
History of snoring, %
History of apneas, %
History of daytime somnolence, %
History of driving problems, %
Patients
Refusing CPAP*
Patients Taking
CPAP Home*
p Value
52
31
44 (3257)
30 (2736)
22 (1353)
25 (1743)
12 (617)
55
0.5 (07)
80
100
65
84
48
1,103
14
50 (4358)
30 (2735)
31 (1853)
32 (2050)
12 (816)
32
6 (116)
61
98
83
81
36
0.002
0.08
. 0.1
0.07
0.08
. 0.1
0.003
0.008
0.01
. 0.1
0.004
. 0.1
. 0.1
Definition of abbreviations: AHI 5 apnea/hypopnea index; BMI 5 body mass index; CPAP 5 continuous positive airway pressure.
* Values in parentheses are interquartile ranges.
(23%) had their machine reclaimed. Of these 50 patients reasons for reclamation were due to either persistent use less
than 2 h per night (n 5 47) or CPAP-induced severe side effects such as recurrent epistaxis (n 5 3). Reasons why patients
stopped using CPAP include lack of benefit (n 5 112), discomfort (including noise and feelings of claustrophobia) (n 5
102), and other reasons (cure as a result of weight loss, recurrent epistaxis, alternative diagnosis, and unknown reasons)
(n 5 28). There was more than one reason documented in 20
(18%) patients.
The median use per night at the most recent clinic visit for
all patients who started home CPAP therapy was 5.6 h (IQR 5
3.8 to 7.0) per night and in patients continuing to use CPAP it
was 5.7 h (IQR 5 3.9 to 7.0) per night. In the latter group,
76% of patients used their CPAP machine for an average of
3.7 h or more per night.
A KaplanMeier plot of the percentage of patients started
on CPAP who continue using their machine over time shows
that 84% were still using CPAP at 12 mo and the use of CPAP
reached a plateau at around 4 yr when 68% continued with
treatment (Figure 1).
TABLE 2
UNIVARIATE ANALYSIS: VARIABLES INFLUENCING
CONTINUED CPAP USE
Hazard Ratio*
p Value
1.48
1.43
1.65
1.89
2.29
2.26
1.55
2.6
2.25
2.23
2.25
1.6
1.53
12.7
0.03
0.001
0.0003
, 0.0001
, 0.0001
, 0.0001
0.0036
0.006
, 0.0001
, 0.0001
, 0.0001
0.01
0.002
, 0.0001
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DISCUSSION
This large follow-up study with a high rate of ascertainment
shows that continuing CPAP usage is related to the severity of
subjective sleepiness and to the apnea plus hypopnea frequency. Continuing CPAP usage at 3 yr occurred in 86% of
patients with an AHI > 30 and an Epworth sleepiness rating
of . 10. Our previous studies have shown that patients with
mild SAHS and AHI between 5 and 15/h benefit from treatment (22), but this study showed that many such patients
abandon CPAP, especially if they are not subjectively
sleepy. Further, long-term use can be predicted most reliably
by the average nightly use of the CPAP machine during the
first 3 mo. The study also showed that patients using CPAP for
less than 2 h per night at 3 mo are unlikely to continue with
long-term treatment. Overall CPAP use in those taking CPAP
home was 68% at 5 yr. Patients continued to abandon CPAP
TABLE 3
MULTIVARIATE ANALYSIS: INDEPENDENT VARIABLES
INFLUENCING CONTINUED CPAP USE
Hazard Ratio*
95% CI
p Value
2.48
1.92
2.76
13.8
1.793.46
1.412.61
1.295.95
8.8621.5
, 0.001
, 0.001
0.009
, 0.001
Figure 2. (Top panel) patients with Epworth score . 10 and varying AHI: percentage using CPAP versus time. (Bottom panel) patients with Epworth score < 10 and varying AHI: percentage using
CPAP versus time.
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nightly CPAP use figures may result from a wide range of patterns of actual nightly use and do not indicate whether use has
been regular or irregular.
Automatic CPAP titration using the Autoset was performed on 106 of the patients studied. Autoset CPAP titration
produces an accurate assessment of the optimal CPAP pressure (32). All of the remaining patients (n 5 1,105) had manual CPAP titrations. These two groups of patients were both
predominantly male and similar in terms of age (median 5 50
yr, Autoset versus 50 yr; manual), BMI (median 5 30 versus
30.5), AHI (median 5 32 versus 31), and Epworth score (median 5 13 versus 12). Two of the patients receiving Autoset
CPAP titration refused to take CPAP home. Kaplan-Meier
survival plots of continued use were similar (log-rank test, p 5
0.11) and the median CPAP run time at the last visit for those
continuing CPAP was similar (5.0 versus 5.7 h). Thus, the patients titrated using Autoset were similar to those titrated
manually and had similar compliance and are therefore included in the analysis.
One of the potential criticisms of this study is that it involved 46 comparisons. Therefore, by chance alone, two to
three relationships would be expected to be significant at the
0.05 level, whereas 23 significant relationships were found.
There is no universally accepted statistical solution to this
problem, and most statisticians feel that the Bonferroni correction for multiple comparisons is an overly conservative approach for such correlational data. However, even if this were
used, there are still significant univariate relations between
continued CPAP use and age, BMI, Epworth score, AHI,
symptoms of SAHS, and CPAP pressure, with the independent determinants being unchanged except that snoring history is no longer significant.
This study was conducted in a health care system where
there was no treatment cost for the patient. Although cost is a
potential determinant of compliance in systems where treatment is not free the available evidence suggests that it may not
significantly affect continued use. Studies in cost-free systems
of subjective continued use (12) and objective short-term use
(13) had similar levels of use to those in the United States, arguing against a significant effect of cost. Furthermore, Rolfe
and colleagues (24) assessed reasons for discontinuing CPAP
treatment in Australia where patients were asked to buy their
CPAP machine and cost was not commonly given as a reason
for discontinuing CPAP treatment (six of 61 patients). It is
therefore likely that most of the findings of this study are also
applicable to health systems that involve costs to the patient
for CPAP treatment.
The effects of a strongly supportive system on long-term
use are uncertain. Waldhorn and colleagues (25) reported
their findings of subjective compliance in a system with limited follow-up support (A follow-up home visit was provided
by a respiratory care company on initiation of home therapy). They found 76% of patients starting CPAP were still
using it at 14 mo, comparable to the 82% in our center at 14
mo. Hence, our findings on long-term use of CPAP may apply
to centers with a less supportive system than our own.
Other limitations of this study include the failure to contact
4.6% of patients and uncertainty about the number of patients
who declined a CPAP trial before it was ever booked. However, we believe that selection bias has been minimized by the
availability of data from nearly all patients in the study group.
Furthermore, the remaining patients do not appear to be different from the study group in important baseline determinants of CPAP use. All of the objective data used in the study
were accrued prospectively, thus avoiding potential bias from
retrospective evaluation of data.
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Other limitations include the facts that the Epworth sleepiness scale has only been in use since 1991 (33), and objective
data from in-built clocks were not available in the early years
of the study (pre-1990), although patients were all subsequently changed over to these CPAP machines. There are
only five patients who started CPAP before 1990 and then
stopped before being changed to machines with built-in time
clocks. We therefore have objective data on compliance on
the vast majority of patients starting CPAP before 1990. In addition, as we successfully followed up only 281 patients at 3 yr
and 61 patients beyond 5 yr, longer-term studies will be required in the future.
In conclusion, this study found that in a cost-free system,
with comprehensive pre-CPAP education very few symptomatic patients refused CPAP treatment, and they were more often women, were more often specialist-referred, and less often
had a history of witnessed apneas. Just over two thirds of patients who took CPAP home continued with CPAP at 5 yr,
with a median nightly use of 5.7 h. Although AHI, subjective
daytime sleepiness, and snoring history have an independent
role in predicting long-term CPAP use, they are weak predictors and should not be used in isolation to determine who
merits a trial of CPAP treatment. Early CPAP use data are
strongly predictive of continuing use and may help decisions
about perseverance with CPAP treatment and allow early
identification of patients who might benefit from more intensive education and support. It also suggests (28) that efforts to
improve CPAP compliance should be targeted to the initial
3 mo.
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