Sleep-Disordered Breathing and Prognosis after Ischemic Stroke: It Is Not Apnea-Hypopnea Index That Matters

Author:

Korostovtseva Lyudmila1,Bochkarev Mikhail1ORCID,Amelina Valeria12,Nikishkina Uliana3,Osipenko Sofia13ORCID,Vasilieva Anastasia1ORCID,Zheleznyakov Vladislav1ORCID,Zabroda Ekaterina14,Gordeev Alexey14ORCID,Golovkova-Kucheryavaia Maria1,Yanishevskiy Stanislav1,Sviryaev Yurii1,Konradi Aleksandra1

Affiliation:

1. Almazov National Medical Research Centre, 197341 St. Petersburg, Russia

2. Department of Clinical Psychology, Herzen State Pedagogical University, 191186 St. Petersburg, Russia

3. Medical Faculty, Pavlov University, 197022 St. Petersburg, Russia

4. Biology Faculty, Saint Petersburg State University, 199034 St. Petersburg, Russia

Abstract

Background: Sleep-disordered breathing (SDB) is highly prevalent after stroke and is considered to be a risk factor for poor post-stroke outcomes. The aim of this observational study was to evaluate the effect of nocturnal respiratory-related indices based on nocturnal respiratory polygraphy on clinical outcomes (including mortality and non-fatal events) in patients with ischemic stroke. Methods: A total of 328 consecutive patients (181 (55%) males, mean age 65.8 ± 11.2 years old) with confirmed ischemic stroke admitted to a stroke unit within 24 h after stroke onset were included in the analysis. All patients underwent standard diagnostic and treatment procedures, and sleep polygraphy was performed within the clinical routine in the first 72 h after admission. The long-term outcomes were assessed by cumulative endpoint (death of any cause, new non-fatal myocardial infarction, new non-fatal stroke/transient ischemic attack, emergency revascularization, emergency hospitalization due to the worsening of cardiovascular disease). A Cox-regression analysis was applied to evaluate the effects of nocturnal respiratory indices on survival. Results: The mean follow-up period comprised 12 months (maximal—48 months). Patients with unfavourable outcomes demonstrated a higher obstructive apnea-hypopnea index, a higher hypoxemia burden assessed as a percent of the time with SpO2 < 90%, a higher average desaturation drop, and a higher respiratory rate at night. Survival time was significantly lower (30.6 (26.5; 34.7) versus 37.9 (34.2; 41.6) months (Log Rank 6.857, p = 0.009)) in patients with higher hypoxemia burden (SpO2 < 90% during ≥2.1% versus <2.1% of total analyzed time). However, survival time did not differ depending on the SDB presence assessed by AHI thresholds (either ≥5 or ≥15/h). The multivariable Cox proportional hazards regression (backward stepwise analysis) model demonstrated that the parameters of hypoxemia burden were significantly associated with survival time, independent of age, stroke severity, stroke-related medical interventions, comorbidities, and laboratory tests. Conclusion: Our study demonstrates that the indices of hypoxemia burden have additional independent predictive value for long-term outcomes (mortality and non-fatal cardiovascular events) after ischemic stroke.

Funder

Russian Science Foundation

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Clinical Biochemistry

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