4.6 Article

Automated Scoring of Respiratory Events in Sleep With a Single Effort Belt and Deep Neural Networks

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING
Volume 69, Issue 6, Pages 2094-2104

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TBME.2021.3136753

Keywords

Apnea hypopnea index; deep learning; polysomnography; respiratory effort; respiratory event detection; sleep apnea

Funding

  1. American Academy of Sleep Medicine (AASM Foundation Strategic Research Award)
  2. Football Players Health Study (FPHS) at Harvard University
  3. Department of Defense through Moberg ICU Solutions, Inc
  4. NIH [1R01NS102190, 1R01NS102574, 1R01NS107291, 1RF1AG064312]
  5. Glenn Foundation for Medical Research
  6. American Federation for Aging Research

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This study utilized a single respiratory effort belt and deep learning to automatically detect and analyze respiratory events in sleep, achieving accurate detection of obstructive apnea and prediction of apnea-hypopnea index. Differentiating between event types proved more challenging. The significance lies in the potential for overcoming the limitations of manual analysis and the application of this automated method outside of clinical environments.
Objective: Automatic detection and analysis of respiratory events in sleep using a single respiratory effort belt and deep learning. Methods: Using 9,656 polysomnography recordings from the Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH), we trained a neural network (WaveNet) to detect obstructive apnea, central apnea, hypopnea and respiratory-effort related arousals. Performance evaluation included event-based analysis and apnea-hypopnea index (AHI) stratification. The model was further evaluated on a public dataset, the Sleep-Heart-Health-Study-1, containing 8,455 polysomnographic recordings. Results: For binary apnea event detection in the MGH dataset, the neural network obtained a sensitivity of 68%, a specificity of 98%, a precision of 65%, a F1-score of 67%, and an area under the curve for the receiver operating characteristics curve and precision-recall curve of 0.93 and 0.71, respectively. AHI prediction resulted in a mean difference of 0.41 +/- 7.8 and a r(2) of 0.90. For the multiclass task, we obtained varying performances: 84% of all labeled central apneas were correctly classified, whereas this metric was 51% for obstructive apneas, 40% for respiratory effort related arousals and 23% for hypopneas. Conclusion: Our fully automated method can detect respiratory events and assess the AHI accurately. Differentiation of event types is more difficult and may reflect in part the complexity of human respiratory output and some degree of arbitrariness in the criteria used during manual annotation. Significance: The current gold standard of diagnosing sleep-disordered breathing, using polysomnography and manual analysis, is time-consuming, expensive, and only applicable in dedicated clinical environments. Automated analysis using a single effort belt signal overcomes these limitations.

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