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Heterogeneous Effects of Continuous Positive Airway Pressure in Non-Sleepy Obstructive Sleep Apnea on Cardiovascular Disease Outcomes: <i>Post Hoc</i> Machine Learning Analysis of the ISAACC Trial (ECSACT Study)

Oren Cohen, Manuel Sánchez‐de‐la‐Torre, Zainab Al-Taie, Samira Khan, Vaishnavi Kundel, Jason C. Kovacic, Esther Gràcia‐Lavedan, Jordi de Batlle, Girish N. Nadkarni, Ferrán Barbé, Mayte Suárez‐Fariñas, Neomi Shah

2024Annals of the American Thoracic Society23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Rationale Randomized controlled trials of continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) therapy for cardiovascular disease (CVD) prevention among patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) have been largely neutral. However, given that OSA is a heterogeneous disease, there may be unidentified subgroups demonstrating differential treatment effects. Objectives We sought to apply a novel data-drive approach to identify nonsleepy OSA subgroups with heterogeneous effects of CPAP on CVD outcomes within the Impact of Sleep Apnea Syndrome in the Evolution of Acute Coronary Syndrome (ISAACC) study. Methods Participants were randomly partitioned into two datasets. One for training (70%) our machine-learning model and a second (30%) for validation of significant findings. Model-based recursive partitioning was applied to identify subgroups with heterogeneous treatment effects. Survival analysis was conducted to compare treatment (CPAP vs. usual care [UC]) outcomes within subgroups. Results A total of 1,224 nonsleepy OSA participants were included. Of 55 features entered into our model, only two appeared in the final model (i.e., average OSA event duration and hypercholesterolemia). Among participants at or below the model-derived average event duration threshold (19.5 s), CPAP was protective for a composite of CVD events (training hazard ratio [HR], 0.46; P = 0.002). For those with longer event duration (&amp;gt;19.5 s), an additional split occurred by hypercholesterolemia status. Among participants with longer event duration and hypercholesterolemia, CPAP resulted in more CVD events compared with UC (training HR, 2.24; P = 0.011). The point estimate for this harmful signal was also replicated in the testing dataset (HR, 1.83; P = 0.118). Conclusions We discovered subgroups of nonsleepy OSA participants within the ISAACC study with heterogeneous effects of CPAP. Among the training dataset, those with longer OSA event duration and hypercholesterolemia had nearly 2.5 times more CVD events with CPAP compared with UC, whereas those with shorter OSA event duration had roughly half the rate of CVD events if randomized to CPAP.

Topics & Concepts

MedicinePost-hoc analysisContinuous positive airway pressureObstructive sleep apneaPost hocSleep apneaDiseaseAirwayInternal medicineCardiologyAnesthesiaObstructive Sleep Apnea ResearchNeuroscience of respiration and sleepChronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) Research