학술논문

Interobserver Agreement When Diagnosing Hypoventilation in Children With Neuromuscular Disorders
Document Type
article
Source
Sleep Medicine Research, Vol 14, Iss 4, Pp 240-244 (2023)
Subject
hypoventilation
hypercapnia
neuromuscular disorder
polysomnography
interobserver agreement
Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry
RC321-571
Language
English
ISSN
2093-9175
2233-8853
Abstract
Neuromuscular disorders can lead to nocturnal hypoventilation. Accurate diagnosis of hypoventilation is imperative to guide treatment decisions. This study determined interobserver agreement for a number of definitions of nocturnal hypoventilation in children and adolescents with neuromuscular disorders. Overall mean interobserver agreement was 89% (range 66–100%); however, reliability of agreement was moderate at best (Fleiss κ = 0.574, p < 0.001). When hypoventilation was present, the objective definition used most frequently was an average increase in partial pressure of carbon dioxide (pCO2) ≥ 3 mm Hg from NREM to REM. The appearance of the transcutaneous CO2 (TCO2) trend graph and an increase in pCO2 ≥ 10 mm Hg from awake to asleep were most often associated with a false positive diagnosis. The variation and at best moderate agreement between pediatric sleep physicians observed in this study when diagnosing hypoventilation in children with neuromuscular disorders may be partially explained by the existence of multiple definitions and failure to remove artifact and “drift” from the TCO2 data.