Therapy Center of Obstructive Sleep Apnea, Department of Otorhinolaryngology, Shanghai Jiao Tong University Affiliated Sixth People's Hospital, 600 Yishan Road, Xuhui District, Shanghai, China.
Otolaryngology Institute of Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai, China.
Sleep Breath. 2021 Mar;25(1):189-197. doi: 10.1007/s11325-020-02083-4. Epub 2020 May 4.
The beneficial effects of weight reduction on obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) are highly variable. Whether or not the variability is associated with the effects of age and sex remains unclear. This study examined this issue with large cross-sectional data.
Anthropometric measurements, polysomnographic variables, biochemical indicators, and medical history were collected for each participant. Multivariable linear regression with interaction terms was used to estimate the modification effect of age on the associations between OSA severity (assessed by apnea-hypopnea index, AHI) with obesity indices (body mass index, BMI; neck circumference, NC; waist circumference, WC; waist-to-hip ratio, WHR) in a sex-specific manner, and vice versa. To facilitate interpretation of the results, participants were further classified into six subpopulations according to both sex and age, and population-specific beta-coefficients were calculated and compared.
A total of 5756 adults (4600 men) with suspected OSA were included in the study. BMI, NC, WC, and WHR were all positively correlated with AHI after adjusting for potential confounders in all populations. In men, these associations were much stronger and more significant in younger than older individuals (P for interaction < 0.001). For example, a 10% increase in BMI was independently associated with a 32% increase in AHI for men < 40 years old, whereas the corresponding increases were 21% and 17% for men 40-60 and > 60 years old, respectively. By contrast, no modification effect of age was observed in women (P for interaction > 0.05). A 10% increase in BMI was associated with 26%, 27%, and 24% increases in AHI for women < 40, 40-60, and > 60 years old, respectively.
Age modifies the associations between obesity indices and OSA severity in a sex-specific manner. These findings may broaden the understanding of age- and sex-related heterogeneities in the pathogenic role of obesity in OSA, and may be beneficial for individualized risk evaluation and treatment management for patients with OSA.
减肥对阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停(OSA)的有益影响差异很大。这种差异是否与年龄和性别有关尚不清楚。本研究使用大型横断面数据对此问题进行了研究。
为每位参与者收集了人体测量学测量、多导睡眠图变量、生化指标和病史。使用具有交互项的多变量线性回归来估计年龄对 OSA 严重程度(通过呼吸暂停低通气指数[AHI]评估)与肥胖指数(体重指数[BMI]、颈围[NC]、腰围[WC]、腰臀比[WHR])之间关联的修饰作用,反之亦然。为了便于解释结果,根据性别和年龄将参与者进一步分为六个亚组,并计算和比较了特定人群的β系数。
本研究共纳入了 5756 名(4600 名男性)疑诊 OSA 的成年人。在所有人群中,BMI、NC、WC 和 WHR 在调整了潜在混杂因素后均与 AHI 呈正相关。在男性中,这些关联在年轻人群中比在老年人群中更强且更显著(P 交互值<0.001)。例如,对于<40 岁的男性,BMI 增加 10%与 AHI 增加 32%独立相关,而对于 40-60 岁和>60 岁的男性,相应的增加分别为 21%和 17%。相比之下,在女性中未观察到年龄的修饰作用(P 交互值>0.05)。BMI 增加 10%与<40 岁、40-60 岁和>60 岁的女性 AHI 增加 26%、27%和 24%分别相关。
年龄以性别特异性方式调节肥胖指数与 OSA 严重程度之间的关联。这些发现可能拓宽对肥胖在 OSA 发病机制中与年龄和性别相关的异质性的理解,并可能有助于对 OSA 患者进行个体化风险评估和治疗管理。