Evaluating Sleep Apnea Risk in Survivors of Intracerebral Hemorrhage in the REDUCE Cohort
Emma Peasley1, Jacqueline Geer2, Julia Zabinska1, Rachel Forman1, Dheeraj Lalwani1, Anna Schwartz4, Guido Falcone4, Lauren Sansing4, Rohan Arora5, Carlos Mena-Hurtado3, Adam De Havenon6, Munachi Okpala7, Cheryl Bushnell8, Michael Mullen9, Jordana Cohen10, Debbie Cohen10, Steven Messe11, Kevin Sheth12
1Neurology, 2Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine, 3Cardiology, Yale School of Medicine, 4Yale School of Medicine, 5Northwell Health, 6Yale University, 7McGovern Medical School-Division of Adult Neurology, Stroke Team, 8Wake Forest School of Medicine, 9Temple University, 10University of Pennsylvania, 11Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, 12Yale UniversityDivision of Neuro and Critical Care
Objective:

Exploratory analysis of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) risk in survivors of intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) enrolled in the REDUCE trial.

 

Background:

There are well-described racial and ethnic disparities in ICH. OSA is a recently identified risk factor for ICH. We analyzed data from ICH survivors in the ongoing REDUCE trial to determine whether race/ethnicity was associated with higher versus lower risk of OSA.

Design/Methods:

The Berlin questionnaire (BQ), a 10-item questionnaire to assess OSA risk, is validated in stroke survivors. Our analysis was conducted on data from 59 subjects enrolled across all five sites of the REDUCE trial, a pragmatic, randomized, open-label trial comparing the effect of a spironolactone-containing antihypertensive regimen versus a standard regimen in survivors of ICH. Subjects completed the BQ at the time of enrollment and were stratified as high versus low risk for OSA using standard definitions. Independent samples t-tests, two-sample z-tests for proportions, and chi-squared analyses were used to assess differences between high and low risk groups. 

 

Results:

Of the 59 subjects, 40.7% were female, 35.6% were Black, 11.9% identified as Hispanic, the average age was 62.5 ± 12.1, and the median number of days post-ICH was 116. High risk scores were assigned to 28 (47.5%) subjects; 31 (52.5%) were low risk. The two groups were balanced for sex and BMI. The average age of the low-risk group was higher (66.4 vs. 58.2 in high risk, p = 0.008). There was no association between race and OSA risk (p = 0.313). Subjects identifying as Hispanic were significantly more likely to be at high risk for OSA than subjects identifying as non-Hispanic (85.7% versus 42.3%, p = 0.031).

Conclusions:

Hispanic ICH survivors were more likely to be at high risk for OSA than non-Hispanic ICH survivors. This preliminary finding should be confirmed in a larger cohort.

10.1212/WNL.0000000000205685