| May
1, 2004
Sleep Apnea Treatment Could Save
Lives & Money
By Reducing Auto Accidents, According To Researchers
By Sue Pondrom
Each year, potentially
980 lives could be saved and $11.1 billion in automobile-accident
costs could be avoided if drivers who suffer from a disorder
called obstructive sleep apnea were successfully treated with
continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP), according to a study
by researchers at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD)
School of Medicine.
Published in the May
2004 issue of the journal Sleep, the study determined
the percentage of accidents related to sleep apnea and applied
the success rate of treatment to conclude how many of these
accidents could potentially have been prevented.
The research team noted
that 1,400 fatalities each year are caused by sleep-deprived
drivers with obstructive sleep apnea, a breathing disorder caused
by intermittent blockage of the airway. The condition is a common
problem affecting millions of Americans. During sleep, these
individuals stop breathing for 10 to 30 seconds at a time, sometimes
up to 400 times a night. As a result of poor quality sleep,
persons with sleep apnea experience excessive daytime sleepiness
which can lead to motor vehicle crashes.
The most common, effective
treatment for obstructive sleep apnea is CPAP, where a patient
wears a mask over the nose during sleep. Pressure from an air
blower forces air through the nasal passages, preventing the
throat from collapsing while the individual sleeps.
However, most people
with obstructive sleep apnea don’t realize they have the
condition and don’t get help.
In their study, the
research team, which included investigators from the U.S. and
Canada, analyzed medical research data from 1980 to 2003 to
investigate the relationship between auto collisions and obstructive
sleep apnea in untreated individuals. Additional data from the
National Safety Council were used to estimate collisions related
to obstructive sleep apnea, plus costs and fatalities, and their
reduction with treatment. A final analysis included a determination
of the annual cost of screening, diagnosing and treating the
disorder in drivers.
“Qualitatively,
the scientific community has known for approximately 20 years
that sleep apnea increases the risk for automobile crashes.
This is the first study to quantify the impact of obstructive
sleep apnea on society, which is quite significant,” noted
the study’s primary author, Alex Sassani, M.D., a UCSD
medical student when the study was conducted and a current resident
in UCSD’s Department of Radiology. “The consequences
of untreated obstructive sleep apnea are great, both in terms
of monetary costs and lives disrupted. This is an enormous burden
that demands attention.”
Past studies have
shown that drivers with obstructive sleep apnea have a higher
rate of collisions than do individuals without the disorder.
In fact, studies comparing alcohol-impaired subjects to individuals
with untreated obstructive sleep apnea show that persons with
untreated sleep apnea perform as poorly on simulated steering
and psychomotor reaction time tests as legally intoxicated individuals.
“It is estimated
that as many as 40 million Americans have undiagnosed sleep
apnea,” said the paper’s senior author, Terence
Davidson, M.D., professor of surgery, UCSD Division of Otolaryngology-Head
and Neck Surgery*. “Dr Sassani's study clearly demonstrates
that these people are falling asleep while driving, killing
themselves and innocent bystanders. It is time for American
Medicine and the American people to wake up to sleep.”
The UCSD investigators
noted the prevalence of obstructed sleep apnea in drivers is
estimated at 3 percent, or 4.7 million drivers. A recent study
of 1,391 commercial truck drivers found that 28 percent had
obstructive sleep apnea, with more than one-third characterized
as moderate to severe. Sassani indicated that in one year alone
– the year 2000 – more than 800,000 drivers with
the condition were involved in motor-vehicle accidents.
The researchers estimate
that 980 of the 1,400 fatalities each year will be avoided with
treatment, based on a 70 percent CPAP success rate. While the
annual cost of treating sleep apnea patients is approximately
$3.18 billion, including screening costs, the researchers noted
that collision costs for accidents caused by sleep apnea patients
were $15.9 billion annually. These collision costs would be
reduced annually by $11.1 billion, using a 70 percent effectiveness
rate.
Furthermore, the study
investigators added that the savings from CPAP treatment “do
not take into account the other economic, medical and social
benefits of treating obstructive sleep apnea syndrome, including
decreased accidents at work, decreased hospitalization costs,
and the improved quality of life.”
The authors also noted that their results pertain only to CPAP
treatment and not to non-CPAP treatments whose efficacy in preventing
collisions has not been fully established. These include weight
loss (surgical and nonsurgical), maxillomandibular advancement
(surgery involving facial changes), laser correction, uvulopalatopharyngoplasty
(minor surgery to lessen excessive soft-palate tissue), and
oral appliances.
According to Davidson,
“It is noteworthy that this study was made possible by
a $2,000 educational grant from a local sleep company, ResMed,
to Dr. Sassani when he was a UCSD medical student. This is an
exemplary example of how the business community and the university
can partner to make good things happen.”
Additional authors
of the paper included Larry J. Findley, M.D., Sleep Disorders
Center of Northern Colorado; Meir Kryger, M.D., University of
Manitoba and Sleep Disorders Centre, St. Boniface General Hospital,
Winnepeg, Canada; Eric Goldlust, Ph.D., UCSD Department of Family
and Preventive Medicine; and Charles George, M.D., University
of Western Ontario.
##
* Dr. Davidson is
a member of Medical Advisory Board for ResMed and Restore Medical.
Media Contact:
Sue Pondrom (619) 543-6163
|