Litcius/Paper detail

Six early CPAP-usage behavioural patterns determine peak CPAP adherence and permit tailored intervention, in patients with obstructive sleep apnoea

Julia Dielesen, Lesedi Jethro Ledwaba-Chapman, Pragna Kasetti, Noori Fatima Husain, Timothy Skinner, Martino F. Pengo, Teresa Whiteman, Koula Asimakopoulou, Simon Merritt, David Jones, Peter Dickel, Siddiq Pulakal, Neil R. Ward, Justin Pepperell, Joerg Steier, S A Sathyapala

2025Thorax12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: High rates of non-adherence to continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) in obstructive sleep apnoea hamper good clinical outcomes. Current recommendations assumes two behaviours (adherence and non-adherence) and days 7-90 follow-up post-CPAP initiation mitigates against non-adherence. OBJECTIVES: To investigate associations between early CPAP-usage behaviours and (1) CPAP adherence at month 3 of treatment and (2) sleep centres' treatment pathways (the procedures patients undergo that may affect barriers or facilitators of CPAP adherence). METHODS: We conducted growth mixture modelling (GMM) on retrospective data from 1000 patients at 5 UK sleep centres. Night 1 to month 3 telemonitored CPAP-usage data were downloaded from 200 patients per centre who started CPAP in 2019 (100) or 2020 (100). Adherence was defined using accepted criteria (mean CPAP-usage ≥4 hours/night for ≥70% of nights). RESULTS: GMM identified six distinct CPAP-usage behaviour patterns over month 1. In four (54% of patients), CPAP-usage increased or decreased, in two (remaining 46%), CPAP-usage/non-usage was consistent. 62% of the cohort were non-adherent by month 3, despite pathways following current recommendations. 98% of patients who were non-adherent by month 3 were already non-adherent by month 1. Regression analysis with a separate dataset demonstrated that early CPAP-usage behaviour explained 86% of the variance in CPAP non-adherence at month 3. CONCLUSIONS: These data, supported by previous work, indicate that recommended day 30-90 follow-up is too late to prevent CPAP non-adherence. Determining CPAP-usage behavioural pattern in week 2 identifies risk of CPAP non-adherence at month 3 and permits the possibility of tailored interventions.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineContinuous positive airway pressureSleep (system call)AnesthesiaObstructive sleep apneaComputer scienceOperating systemObstructive Sleep Apnea ResearchSleep and related disordersNeuroscience of respiration and sleep
Six early CPAP-usage behavioural patterns determine peak CPAP adherence and permit tailored intervention, in patients with obstructive sleep apnoea | Litcius