Sleep medicine | 2019

Nocturnal dialysis improves sleep apnea more than daytime dialysis: a meta-analysis of crossover studies.

 
 
 

Abstract


PURPOSE\nTo systematically review the literature for articles evaluating differences in polysomnography (PSG) data when patients are on primarily daytime hemodialysis (conventional hemodialysis or continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis) versus nocturnal hemodialysis (nocturnal hemodialysis or nocturnal peritoneal dialysis). Then to perform a meta-analysis on the available PSG data, specifically evaluating differences in apnea hypopnea index (AHI) and mean saturation of oxygen (SpO2) between these two groups.\n\n\nMETHODS\nTwo authors systematically searched MEDLINE/Pubmed, Scopus, EMBASE, CINAHL, and Cochrane. Searches were performed through December 6, 2018.\n\n\nRESULTS\nA total of four adult crossover studies (91 patients, age 50.4\xa0±\xa012.4, BMI 25.1\xa0±\xa05.3) reported PSG data. The daytime hemodialysis (DHD) and nocturnal hemodialysis (NHD) AHI decreased from 24.6\xa0±\xa018.2 to 12.6\xa0±\xa011.8 (events/hour) with a mean difference of\xa0-11.9 [95% CI\xa0-13.47,\xa0-10.37], Z score of 15.07 (P\xa0<\xa00.00001). The standardized mean difference was\xa0-1.35 [95% CI\xa0-2.70, 0.01]. Two studies reported mean SpO2 changes during PSG. The DHD and NHD SpO2 increased from 92.7\xa0±\xa02.4 to 94.7\xa0±\xa02.2 with a mean difference of 2.26 [95% CI\xa0-0.18, 4.71], Z score 1.82 (P\xa0=\xa00.07).\n\n\nCONCLUSION\nIn the current literature, nocturnal hemodialysis improves AHI more than daytime hemodialysis. A trend towards improvement in mean SpO2 with nocturnal dialysis was noted, but did not reach statistical significance. Consideration can be given for transitioning patients who have end stage renal disease and sleep apnea from daytime to nocturnal hemodialysis as an adjunct to other treatment modalities.

Volume 64
Pages \n 37-42\n
DOI 10.1016/J.SLEEP.2019.06.005
Language English
Journal Sleep medicine

Full Text