ABSTRACT
Background: Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is an independent and modifiable risk factor for atrial fibrillation (AF) and correlates with a three-fold higher risk of incident AF. Although OSA is prevalent in patients with AF, it remains underdiagnosed. Guidelines for OSA screening are ambiguous.
Local Problem: A small community hospital in the southeast United States lacked standardized OSA screening and consistent sleep clinic referral for hospitalized patients with AF.
Methods: Over 3 months, an OSA bundle (including screening, education, and referral) was implemented for hospitalized patients with AF. A retrospective electronic health record (EHR) review established a baseline comparison group. Descriptive analyses between the intervention and comparison groups evaluated the effectiveness of the OSA bundle.
Interventions: Eligible patients received OSA screening with the STOP-Bang questionnaire. A STOP-Bang score of 3 or higher triggered patient education about the arrhythmogenic relationship of OSA and AF. At discharge, patients received an ambulatory sleep clinic referral. After 3 months, an EHR review assessed the rate of sleep clinic follow-up, sleep testing, OSA diagnosis, and initiation of positive airway pressure.
Results: Of the 68 patients in the comparison group and 33 patients in the intervention group, the rate of OSA screening increased from 4.4% to 100%. Sleep clinic referral increased from 66.7% to 93.5%. Sleep clinic follow-up increased from 0% to 10%.
Conclusion: Screening for OSA and sleep clinic referral improved with the OSA bundle; however, sleep clinic follow-up remained low. Further quantitative and qualitative investigation is needed to better understand barriers to sleep clinic follow-up.