Screening for Sleep Apnea in Patients Undergoing Atrial Fibrillation Ablation

Screening for Sleep Apnea in Patients Undergoing Atrial Fibrillation Ablation

Description
Description

The American Academy of Sleep Medicine considers atrial fibrillation (AF) to be high risk for sleep disordered breathing, and recommends that those with AF be evaluated for sleep apnea in its clinical guidelines. However, this has not yet become standard practice. The primary reasons for this are that sleep apnea remains under-suspected and under-diagnosed by electrophysiology physicians treating patients with AF, overnight sleep studies are cumbersome and are frequently associated with patient discomfort and high cost, and a mechanism for coordinating sleep apnea screening and treatment referral has not been established in electrophysiology clinics.

The gold standard for the diagnosis of sleep apnea is overnight polysomnography, typically conducted in a sleep laboratory, which can be costly and cumbersome for patients. Home sleep studies are FDA-approved for the diagnosis of sleep apnea and offer patients the opportunity to be assessed in a more natural sleep environment, and often in a more timely manner.

It has been demonstrated that diagnosis and treatment of sleep apnea reduces the risk of arrhythmia recurrence following AF ablation to a level comparable to those without sleep apnea. The goal of this study is to examine the feasibility of screening all patients undergoing AF ablation for sleep apnea, and to refer those patients with sleep apnea for evaluation and treatment by a sleep specialist.