Overnight Sleep Staging Using Chest-Worn Accelerometry

Fons Schipper (Corresponding author), Angela Grassi, Marco Ross, Andreas Cerny, Peter Anderer, Lieke Hermans, Fokke van Meulen, Mickey Leentjens, Emily Schoustra, Pien Bosschieter, Ruud J.G. van Sloun, Sebastiaan Overeem, Pedro Fonseca

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Samenvatting

Overnight sleep staging is an important part of the diagnosis of various sleep disorders. Polysomnography is the gold standard for sleep staging, but less-obtrusive sensing modalities are of emerging interest. Here, we developed and validated an algorithm to perform "proxy" sleep staging using cardiac and respiratory signals derived from a chest-worn accelerometer. We collected data in two sleep centers, using a chest-worn accelerometer in combination with full PSG. A total of 323 participants were analyzed, aged 13-83 years, with BMI 18-47 kg/m 2. We derived cardiac and respiratory features from the accelerometer and then applied a previously developed method for automatic cardio-respiratory sleep staging. We compared the estimated sleep stages against those derived from PSG and determined performance. Epoch-by-epoch agreement with four-class scoring (Wake, REM, N1+N2, N3) reached a Cohen's kappa coefficient of agreement of 0.68 and an accuracy of 80.8%. For Wake vs. Sleep classification, an accuracy of 93.3% was obtained, with a sensitivity of 78.7% and a specificity of 96.6%. We showed that cardiorespiratory signals obtained from a chest-worn accelerometer can be used to estimate sleep stages among a population that is diverse in age, BMI, and prevalence of sleep disorders. This opens up the path towards various clinical applications in sleep medicine.

Originele taal-2Engels
Artikelnummer5717
Aantal pagina's13
TijdschriftSensors
Volume24
Nummer van het tijdschrift17
DOI's
StatusGepubliceerd - 1 sep. 2024

Financiering

This work has been performed in the IMPULS framework (Advanced Sleep Monitoring, 2016) of the Eindhoven MedTech Innovation Center (e/MTIC, incorporating Eindhoven University of Technology, Philips Research, and Sleep Medicine Center Kempenhaeghe).

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