Abstract
IntroductionThe purpose of this study was to investigate the prevalence of otitis media and other otolaryngologic disorders in children with Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA) compared to those without OSA in a large cohort. MethodsA retrospective cohort study was carried within the US Collaborative Network within TriNetX. The OSA group was defined by ICD-10 code G47.33 and non-OSA group excluded patients with OSA. Both groups were required to have a CPT code for an outpatient visit to act as a control: 99202–99215. Propensity score matching for age, sex, and race was performed. Prevalence of otitis media (ICD-10H65, H66), chronic otitis media (ICD-10H66.1, H66.2, H66.3, H65.2, H65.3, and H65.4), tympanostomy (CPT 69433, 69436), adenoidectomy (CPT 42830, 42831), tonsillectomy (CPT 42825, 42826), adenotonsillectomy (CPT 42820, 42821), and allergic rhinitis (ICD-10 J30.9) were compared in this cohort. ResultsPropensity score matching yielded 165,665 (M = 95949, F = 69901) patients with a mean age of 10.7 (SD = 4.07) for each cohort. Children with OSA were 1.27x and 3.86x more likely to be diagnosed with otitis media and chronic otitis media, respectively (P<.0001). They were 3.81x more likely to undergo a tympanostomy (P<.0001). Children with OSA were 4.1x, 18.2x, and 24.7x more likely undergo an adenoidectomy, tonsillectomy, and adenotonsillectomy, respectively (P<.0001). Children with OSA were also 2.03x as likely to have a diagnosis of allergic rhinitis (P<.0001). ConclusionChildren with OSA experience otitis media and related surgical intervention more than children without OSA. Since allergic rhinitis and adenoid hypertrophy are contributors to both OSA and AOM, their increased prevalence in children with OSA may explain their increased frequency of AOM.
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