Abstract

Abstract Purpose Evaluate the sleep staging agreement between polysomnography (PSG) and Sleep Profiler (SP) in patients with suspected isolated REM-sleep-behavior-disorder. Methods Twenty-six patients with reported dream-enactment-behavior (Site1=16, Site2=10; 27% women; age 64±13 years) underwent a diagnostic PSG with simultaneously recorded SP. A registered sleep-technologist at each site performed PSG-staging, while SP was auto-staged and technically reviewed/edited. Across technicians, the initial staging was blinded. Site1 then performed unblinded restaging of PSG=N3(N2) vs. SP=N2(N3) epochs, while Site2 conducted a blinded, carefully-targeted restaging of N3. Statistics included Cohen’s kappa and Chi-square analyses. Results Agreement between SP and Site1 vs. Site2 were significantly different for Wake (kappa:Site1=0.816;Site2=0.650;combined=0.736), stage N1 (kappa:Site1=0.149;Site2=0.228;combined=0.188), stage N2 (kappa:Site1=0.632;Site2=0.718;combined=0.659), stage N3 (kappa:Site1=0.715;Site2=0.368;combined=0.525) and REM (kappa:Site1=0.827;Site2=0.719;combined=0.766)(all P<0.001). After restaging of N3, the kappa values improved at Site1 (unblinded:N2=0.659/N3=0.883) and Site2 (blinded:N2=0.775/N3=0.736)(combined:N2=0.735/N3=0.851). The proportion of PSG-epochs restaged from N3 to N2 was 17% at Sites1 and 38% at Site2 (P<0.001), while Site1 had fewer remaining PSG=N3 vs. SP=N2 conflicts (5.6% vs. 20.8%, P<0.001). Compared to Site2, Site1 had a superior: REM kappa due to fewer SP=N2 disagreements (8.5% vs. 16.8%, P<0.001), and Wake kappa resulting from fewer SP=N1 (6.6 vs. 15.6%, P<0.001) and SP=N2 conflicts (5.9 vs. 12.0%, P<0.001). Conversely, the Site1 N1 kappa was inferior due to greater SP=wake disagreement (41.6% vs. 19.8%, P<0.001). Discussion N3 was excessively stage by both PSG technicians before restaging. At Site1, Wake, N3, and REM had almost-perfect-agreement with SP, while N2 had substantial-agreement. At Site2 and across-site, substantial-agreement was observed for Wake, N2, N3, and REM.

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