Drug-induced Sleep Endoscopy (DISE) with Simulation Bite to Predict the Success of Oral Appliance Therapy in Treating Obstructive Sleep Apnea/Hypopnea Syndrome (OSAHS)
Date
2020Author
Cavaliere, Matteo
De Luca, Pietro
De Santis, Carla
Scarpa, Alfonso
Ralli, Massimo
Di Stadio, Arianna
Viola, Pasquale
Chiarella, Giuseppe
Cassandro, Claudia
Cassandro, Francesco Maria
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Study objectives: Oral appliances
have gained their place in the treatment of
obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) where custom-made
titratable mandibular advancement devices (MAD)
have become the oral appliance of choice. This study
aimed to asses the value of the drug-induced sleep
endoscopy (DISE) using a MAD in the prediction of
treatment outcome for OSAHS
Methods: This is a prospective, single-center
cohort study that enrolled sixty-six consecutive
patients with diagnosed OSA (5 events/h < apneahypopnea index (AHI) < 50 events/h) to be treated
with a custom-made titratable MAD. The patients
were evaluated polysomnographically with the MAD
in situ after the adaptation and titration period of 3
months. The associations between findings during
DISE and treatment outcome were assessed
Results: The subjects showed a wide range of
severity of OSAHS pre-treatment: median AHI was
43.10 with a range from 20.13 to 66.07. The
simulation bite was associated with a significant
increase in cross-sectional area at level of the
velopharynx, tongue base and epiglottis. MAD
treatment response in the studied population was
91%, with a mean AHI improving from 43.10 to
12.93.
Conclusions: Drug-induced sleep endoscopy
with simulation bite is an acceptably reproducible
technique for determining the sites of obstruction in
OSAHS subjects; it thus offers possibilities as a
prognostic indicator for treatment with MAD