Wearable Patch Found to Detect Sleep Apnea
Published on June 5, 2017 | SleepReviewMag.com
Results show that the total rate of clinical agreement between the patch and standard in-lab polysomnography was 87.4% with 95% confidence interval of 81.4% to 91.9%. According to the authors, the study results will be used in obtaining approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for SomnaPatch. The skin-adhesive diagnostic patch weighs less than one ounce and records nasal pressure, blood oxygen saturation, pulse rate, respiratory effort, sleep time, and body position.
“Our study provided clinical validation of a new wearable device for diagnosing sleep apnea,” says principal investigator Maria Merchant, PhD, CEO of Somnarus Inc, in a release. “It was most surprising to us how well this inexpensive miniature device performed in comparison with in-lab sleep studies.”
Simultaneous polysomnography and patch recordings from 174 subjects were included in the analysis. An additional home usability study found that 38 out of 39 users were successful in activating the diagnostic patch and collecting at least 4 hours of sleep data while relying only on the instructions included with the device.
“Most home sleep diagnostic devices are difficult for patients to use and are disruptive to patient’s sleep,” says Merchant. “Our study showed that this wearable home sleep monitor is very comfortable, easy to use, and does not negatively affect sleep.”
The research abstract was published recently in an online supplement of the journal Sleep (abstract #0448), presented as a poster presentation on Sunday, June 4, and will be presented as an oral presentation on Wednesday, June 7, in Boston at SLEEP 2017.
Image courtesy Somnarus Inc