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Pressure modification for improving usage of CPAP machines for obstructive sleep apnoea

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Pressure modification for improving usage of CPAP machines for obstructive sleep apnoea

Sübutlu məlumatların xülasələri
23.09.2014 • Sonuncu dəyişiklik 23.09.2014
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Auto-CPAP may improve patient compliance with continuous positive airways pressure therapy in obstructive sleep apnoea compared to fixed pressure devices.

A Cochrane review included 45 studies on the efficacy of pressure level modifications and additional humidification in increasing CPAP machine usage, with a total of 1 874 subjects.

  • Auto-CPAP (30 studies, n=1 136): Cross-over studies: difference in machine usage 0.21 hours/night (0.08 to 0.35, statistically significant; 16 trials, n=450) in favour of auto-CPAP, but this difference is of questionable clinical significance. Overall reduction of 0.64 units (–0.12 to –1.16) in Epworth Sleepiness Scores between pressure modes in favour of auto-CPAP. Parallel group trials: Pooled effect estimates detected a similar but not statistically significant difference for average nightly machine usage, and there was either no significant difference in Epworth Sleepiness Scores. More participants preferred auto-CPAP to fixed CPAP where this was measured.
  • Bi-level PAP (6 studies, n=285): no significant differences were observed in machine usage. One small study found no difference in preference.
  • C-Flex (6 studies, n=318): no significant difference was observed in machine usage.
  • Humidification (3 studies, n=135): there were conflicting findings between the studies. Two parallel group trials found no significant difference in machine usage, whereas a cross-over study found a significant difference.

Comment: The quality of evidence is downgraded by limitations in study quality and by indirectness (differences in studied patients).

Ədəbiyyat

  1. Smith I, Lasserson TJ. Pressure modification for improving usage of continuous positive airway pressure machines in adults with obstructive sleep apnoea. Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2009;(4):CD003531.