Many patients prefer a sleep study in their own bed – it is more convenient and cheaper. It is now possible to produce data from a home sleep study that are equal to a sleep laboratory polysomnogram.
Portable polysomnogram monitors are about the size of a small transistor radio. They monitor nasal airflow, electroencephalogram, electrocardiogram, electromyography, oximetry and chest, abdominal and leg movements. These devices have been well validated in numerous studies with the gold standard of the sleep laboratory polysomnogram.7 The main difference between the home study and the sleep laboratory polysomnogram is not the data, but the technician in attendance all night to adjust electrodes, ensure data quality and observe the activities of the patient both asleep and awake.
One negative feature of inpatient studies is that some patients do not sleep as well in a sleep laboratory as they would at home. However, with home studies, if electrodes fall off the patient may be oblivious of this until morning and some home sleep studies do not monitor leg movements. In addition, they also may miss less common sleep disorders, such as nocturnal seizures or parasomnia.
The essential elements
For a successful home sleep study, from my experience many elements are required. If any element is deficient, the outcome may be suboptimal.
General practitioner
The general practitioner needs a working knowledge of sleep apnoea to ensure that referrals are appropriate. Inappropriate referrals often present difficulties in interpretation and recommendations for the reporting sleep physician. The general practitioner should consider the practicalities of eventual treatment options before the sleep study is done. For example, a frail elderly patient is unlikely to cope with a CPAP mask and pump.
It is essential to select patients who are able to apply the sleep equipment and keep it on during the night. A home sleep study on an elderly patient with cognitive impairment or severe Parkinson’s disease is usually doomed to failure. Correct patient selection for the home studies, or for that matter an inpatient study, is an essential element which may ultimately dictate the success or failure of the test. For most home studies, patients who are ‘computer savvy’ are more capable of managing electrodes and oximeters.
Equipment
This is the least problematic of the elements as it is robust. Electrodes and an oximeter are relatively easy to apply and remove. The commonest problems encountered are an oximeter trace dropping off during the night or from improperly applied electrodes. The equipment usually comes with photographs showing how to place the electrodes and oximeter.
Technician
The technician needs a good working knowledge of not only sleep apnoea, but also other common sleep pathologies and comorbidities. The technician should take a history, record medications, measure body mass index and provide demographic data which are essential for the reporting physician.
Data analysis
After the study, the technician uploads the data to a remote centre where it is collated and scored by sleep scientists. It is then sent to the sleep physician with the raw data and the patient’s history, symptoms, medications and demographics.
Sleep physician
The sleep physician reports the results of the sleep study and recommends treatment. They ascertain whether the sleep scoring is reliable and consider the results in light of the clinical indications and other patient factors such as comorbidities and occupation, such as school bus driver. Knowing the patient’s medications is also important and may explain, for example, the lack of REM (rapid eye movement) sleep, why a person is excessively sleepy or is having a lot of central sleep apnoea (for example from opioids). Reporting is hindered by inadequate clinical details.
Although I recommend that patients having difficulties with CPAP should see a sleep physician, only a small proportion of them do. Sleep physicians often fine-tune treatment of sleep apnoea in more difficult cases including complex sleep apnoea. Their global assessment adds significant value to the general management of these patients, particularly in finding the cause and diagnosing and managing other comorbidities. The sleep physician’s broad training, not only in sleep disorders but in general medicine and the psychiatric aspects of sleep, provides an important oversight. All patients with sleep apnoea adversely affecting their driving or with a potentially dangerous occupation should be seen by a sleep physician. To do otherwise could have legal ramifications.
Other requirements
Other secondary elements are also needed, for example dietitians and dentists for mandibular splints. Patients may also need a support person to assist them with treatment.