Multidimensional phenotyping to distinguish among distinct obstructive sleep apnea, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and overlap syndrome phenotypes

Sleep Med. 2024 May 3:119:281-288. doi: 10.1016/j.sleep.2024.04.038. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Objective/background: Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) and their comorbid association called Overlap Syndrome (OS) are frequent chronic diseases with high individual and societal burdens. Precise descriptions of the respective symptoms, comorbidities, and medications associated with these three conditions are lacking. We used a multidimensional phenotyping approach to identify relevant phenotypes characterizing these 3 disorders.

Patients/methods: 308 patients with OSA, COPD and OS were prospectively assessed using a combination of body shape measurements and multidimensional questionnaires evaluating sleep, fatigue, depression and respiratory symptoms. Comorbidities and medications were confirmed by physicians. Patients made home blood pressure self-measurements using a connected wearable device to identify undiagnosed or uncontrolled hypertension.

Results: Three distinct relevant phenotypes were identified. OSA patients were round in shape with a balanced waist-to-hip ratio, frequent witnessed apneas, nocturia, daytime sleepiness, depression, and high diastolic blood pressure. COPD patients had a thinner body shape with a high waist-to-hip ratio, complained mainly of fatigue, and exhibited a higher resting heart rate. OS patients were round in shape with a balanced waist-to-hip ratio, reported little sleepiness and depression, but had impaired sleep and the highest rate of cardio-metabolic comorbidities. Diminished fitness-to-drive was most apparent in patients with OSA and OS. Home blood pressure measurements identified undiagnosed hypertension in 80 % of patients and in nearly 80 % of those with hypertension it was uncontrolled by their current medications.

Conclusions: Our systematic multidimensional phenotyping approach identified distinct body shapes, symptoms, and comorbidity profiles among patients with OSA, COPD, and OS.

Keywords: Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; Connected wearable phenotypes; Multidimensional assessment; Overlap syndrome; Sleep apnea.