Age modifies the association between severe sleep apnea and all-cause mortality

While sleep apnea (SA) gets more prevalent with advancing age, the impact of age on the association between SA and health outcomes is not well known. We assessed the association between the severity of SA and all-cause mortality in different age groups using large longitudinal data. We applied a Nat...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Sleep medicine 2024-09, Vol.121, p.18-24
Hauptverfasser: Ramezani, Amin, Azarian, Mehrnaz, Sharafkhaneh, Amir, Maghsoudi, Arash, Jones, Melissa B., Penzel, Thomas, Razjouyan, Javad
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:While sleep apnea (SA) gets more prevalent with advancing age, the impact of age on the association between SA and health outcomes is not well known. We assessed the association between the severity of SA and all-cause mortality in different age groups using large longitudinal data. We applied a Natural Language Processing pipeline to extract the apnea-hypopnea index (AHI) from the physicians’ interpretation of sleep studies performed at the Veteran Health Administration (FY 1999–2022). We categorized the participants as no SA (n-SA, AHI< 5) and severe SA (s-SA, AHI≥30). We grouped the cohort based on age: Young≤40; Middle-aged:40–65; and Older adults≥65; and calculated the odds ratio (aOR) of mortality adjusted for age, sex, race, ethnicity, BMI, and Charlson-Comorbidity Index (CCI) using n-SA as the reference. We identified 146,148 participants (age 52.23 ± 15.02; BMI 32.11 ± 6.05; male 86.7 %; White 66 %). Prevalence of s-SA increased with age. All-cause mortality was lower in s-SA compared to n-SA in the entire cohort (aOR,0.56; 95%CI: 0.54,0.58). Comparing s-SA to n-SA, the all-cause mortality rates (Young 1.86 % vs 1.49 %; Middle-aged 12.07 % vs 13.34 %; and Older adults 26.35 % vs 40.18 %) and the aOR diminished as the age increased (Young: 1.11, 95%CI: 0.93–1.32; Middle-aged: 0.64, 95%CI: 0.61–0.67; and Older adults: 0.44, 95%CI: 0.41–0.46). The prevalence of severe SA increased while the odds of all-cause mortality compared to n-SA diminished with age. SA may exert less harmful effects on the aged population. A causality analysis is warranted to assess the relationship between SA, aging, and all-cause mortality. •Severe sleep apnea associates with increased mortality compared to no sleep apnea.•This association reverses after adjusting for different confounding factors.•Sleep apnea may be associated with less harmful effects as population ages.
ISSN:1389-9457
1878-5506
1878-5506
DOI:10.1016/j.sleep.2024.06.012