Academic Underachievement Disorder Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Prevalence of Type D Personality in OSAS and the CPAP Therapy Compliance and Cardiovascular Complications in Moderate to Severe OSAS With Type D Personality.
Type D personality is characterized by negative affectivity and social inhibition and is
assessed with the DS-14 questionnaire. This type of personality was initially described in
patients with coronary heart disease and associated with poor prognosis and diminished
quality of life. Whereas the prevalence of type D personality in patients with coronary heart
disease is between 27% and 31%, the prevalence in the general population is between 13% and
24%. The prevalence of type D personality in OSA (Obstructive Sleep Apnea Syndrome) was only
investigated in patients with a moderate or severe OSA (Apnea-hypopnea index > 15/hour)
already on standard clinical treatment with CPAP (Continuous Positive Airway Pressure). The
overall prevalence of type D personality in OSA is still unknown. Furthermore, OSA is
frequently associated with cardiovascular disease. No studies were performed on the impact of
type D personality and cardiovascular complications in OSA.
Until now, only a few studies were performed to investigate type D personality in OSA
patients treated with CPAP therapy. One retrospective study showed that OSA patients with
type D personality experienced more side effects of CPAP treatment and were less compliant to
therapy. In a more recent prospective study, the influence of type D personality on CPAP
compliance could not be confirmed. No information is available about the frequency of visits
and the time spent by these patients to remediate CPAP side effects. There is also no data
about the discontinuation rate of CPAP treatment in this population of patients. It is
possible that a specific follow up of those patients is needed to enhance CPAP compliance.
After a while, CPAP therapy can have an influence on mood and behavior. Therefore, it is
possible that CPAP therapy can alter the patient's answers to the DS-14 questionnaire. This
could explain the different outcome of the retrospective and prospective studies mentioned
above. No studies were performed to test the reliability and validate the DS-14 questionnaire
in OSA patients.
Consequently, the aim of the present study is to evaluate more extensively the importance of
type D personality traits in OSA patients.
Objective of the study
1. To determine the overall prevalence of type D personality in untreated OSA ( Obstructive
sleep apnea) patients and their subtypes; mild, moderate, severe and REM (rapid eye
movement) OSA.
Full polysomnography and questionnaires:ESS, PSQI, DS-14, SF-36, ISI, FAS, HADS, BFI-2,
CIS will be used to answer this question.
A multistage tracking for gender and type D personality was done. In general population,
there are twice as much men than women suffering from OSA. This means that the
investigator need to recruit 41% (√ 2 ≈ 1.41%) more men than women. In the general
population, the prevalence of type D personality is 25%.
To answer this question, the investigator also assume that there will be 50 % mild, 25%
moderate and 25% severe OSA.
Chi- squared test:
With a power of 0.9: 97 type D patients are needed with a total of 400 patients to be
recruited.
2. To establish the reliability and validity of the DS-14 questionnaire to diagnose type D
personality in OSA patients.
Full polysomnography and questionnaires:ESS, PSQI, DS-14, SF-36, ISI, FAS, HADS, BFI-2,
CIS will be used. the DS-14 questionnaire will be filled out one month later.
An interclass correlation analysis with kappa ≈ 0.8 will give a good correlation between
the two scores. First, a pilot study will be done on a small sample of patients. In
function of these results, a sample calculation required to have a significant result
will be done. In an earlier study, 135 patients with type D personality were studied to
assess the reproducibility of the DS-14 questionnaire.
3. To investigate the impact of type D personality on CPAP ( continuous positive airway
pressure) treatment in OSA patients, especially on compliance for CPAP, on the CPAP
discontinuation rate and on the frequency and time spent to remediate side effects of
CPAP treatment.
Full polysomnography and questionnaires:ESS, PSQI, DS-14, SF-36, ISI, FAS, HADS, BFI-2,
CIS will be used. The DS-14 questionnaire will be filled out one month later.Titration
polysomnography 2 months later and questionnaires: ESS, PSQI, DS-14, SF-36, ISI, FAS,
HADS, CIS.Consultation 3 month later for control compliance and questionnaires: DS-14,
SF-36, HADS, FAS, CIS, EES, PSQI.Polyclinic visit 1 year later for control compliance
and questionnaires: DS-14, SF-36, HADS, FAS, CIS, EES, PSQI.Monitoring time and
frequency of free consultation for resolving any side effects of the CPAP treatment.
Additionally, the investigator assume that there is a 25% chance (midrange) to
discontinue CPAP treatment and 70% (midrange) compliance. Compliance will be normalized
to a percentage scale by dividing by the expected hours of sleep (for the power
analysis, we take 7 hours expected sleep). A hypothetical difference of 1 hour will
therefore represent 14.29% (=1/7).
For the t-tests:
Standard deviation: based on a 95% interval for CPAP [4h-9h], the investigator divide
this interval of 5 h by 4 (4 sigma's for 95%). Followed by a normalization (1/7), one
sigma gives 17.86%. With a power of 0.9 and α= 0.01 (Bonferonni correction), 128
patients will be needed for an unbalanced design of both groups in a ratio of 75% versus
25%.
For the Fisher Exact- test:
General OSA population Expected in type D Good compliance 70% (between 60 & 80%) 56% (
70% minus 14%) Poor compliance 30% 44%
With a power of 0.9: in total 580 patients are needed. (580 patients of which 25% type
D: Feasible since about 500 new OSA patients are diagnosed and treated a year at the UZ
Brussels)
4. To determine the influence of type D personality on cardiovascular complications in OSA.
Baseline polysomnography: two groups: OSA with type D and without type D and questionnaires:
ESS, PSQI, DS-14, SF-36, ISI, FAS, HADS, BFI-2, CIS. Search medical files for cardiovascular
morbidity in both groups Additionally, the investigator assume that there is a 25% chance
(midrange) to discontinue CPAP treatment and 70% (midrange) compliance. Compliance will be
normalized to a percentage scale by dividing by the expected hours of sleep (for the power
analysis, we take 7 hours expected sleep). A hypothetical difference of 1 hour will therefore
represent 14.29% (=1/7).
For the t-tests:
Standard deviation: based on a 95% interval for CPAP [4h-9h], the investigator divide this
interval of 5 h by 4 (4 sigma's for 95%). Followed by a normalization (1/7), one sigma gives
17.86%. With a power of 0.9 and α= 0.01 (Bonferonni correction), 128 patients will be needed
for an unbalanced design of both groups in a ratio of 75% versus 25%.
For the Fisher Exact- test:
General OSA population Expected in type D Good compliance 70% (between 60 & 80%) 56% ( 70%
minus 14%) Poor compliance 30% 44%
With a power of 0.9: in total 580 patients are needed. (580 patients of which 25% type D:
Feasible since about 500 new OSA patients are diagnosed and treated a year at the UZ
Brussels)
Procedures To determine the overall prevalence of type D personality in untreated OSA
patients and their subtypes, all patients admitted to the sleep laboratory for a
polysomnography will be asked to participate to this study. An informed consent will be
signed and patients will complete a number of questionnaires. In the current practice of the
sleep laboratory, the Epworth sleepiness scale, the Stanford sleepiness scale, the Pittsburgh
sleep quality index, the Insomnia severity scale, the DS-14 questionnaire, the SF-36
questionnaire, the FAS, HADS, BFI-2 and CIS are filled out by each patient.
All patients who test positive for OSA (AHI > 5/hour) and positive for type D personality
(DS-14: SI>10 and NA>10) will be asked to complete these questionnaires once more 1 month
later. This is necessary to evaluate the test-retest reliability/stability of the DS-14
questionnaire in OSA. To evaluate the validity of this questionnaire in OSA, correlation
patterns with the BFI-2 and the HADS will be investigated.
For all patients diagnosed with moderate OSA in which treatment with CPAP is indicated, the
questionnaires will be repeated during their second polysomnography (standard of care), 3
months after the second polysomnography (standard of care) and 1 year after this last visit
(standard of care). The second polysomnography is needed to estimate the therapeutic pressure
and to meet the criteria for the OSA convention. The time necessary for treatment education
(time to explain function of CPAP), frequency of visits and time necessary to deal with
complications, treatment compliance (hours of use CPAP device), treatment discontinuation
will be monitored. The group with OSA and type D personality will be compared with the OSA
group without type D personality.
A search for cardiovascular events in the electronic medical file of all OSA patients with
and without type D personality will be carried out.
The above mentioned procedures will all be carried out in the sleep laboratory of the UZ
Brussel, Laarbeeklaan 101, 1090 Jette.
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