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Interrater reliability of sleep stage scoring: a meta-analysis

Authors
Lee, Yun JiLee, Jae YongCho, Jae HoonChoi, Ji Ho
Issue Date
1-Jan-2022
Publisher
The American Academy of Sleep Medicine
Keywords
interrater reliability; meta-analysis; sleep stage scoring
Citation
Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine, v.18, no.1, pp 193 - 202
Pages
10
Journal Title
Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine
Volume
18
Number
1
Start Page
193
End Page
202
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/sch/handle/2021.sw.sch/20303
DOI
10.5664/jcsm.9538
ISSN
1550-9389
1550-9397
Abstract
Study Objectives: We evaluated the interrater reliabilities of manual polysomnography sleep stage scoring. We included all studies that employed Rechtschaffen and Kales rules or American Academy of Sleep Medicine standards. We sought the overall degree of agreement and those for each stage. Methods: The keywords were "Polysomnography (PSG)," "sleep staging," "Rechtschaffen and Kales (R&K)," "American Academy of Sleep Medicine (AASM)," "interrater (interscorer) reliability," and "Cohen's kappa." We searched PubMed, OVID Medline, EMBASE, the Cochrane library, KoreaMed, KISS, and the MedRIC. The exclusion criteria included automatic scoring and pediatric patients. We collected data on scorer histories, scoring rules, numbers of epochs scored, and the underlying diseases of the patients. Results: A total of 101 publications were retrieved; 11 satisfied the selection criteria. The Cohen's kappa for manual, overall sleep scoring was 0.76, indicating substantial agreement (95% confidence interval, 0.71-0.81; P < .001). By sleep stage, the figures were 0.70, 0.24, 0.57, 0.57, and 0.69 for the W, N1, N2, N3, and R stages, respectively. The interrater reliabilities for stage N2 and N3 sleep were moderate, and that for stage Ni sleep was only fair. Conclusions: We conducted a meta-analysis to generalize the variation in manual scoring of polysomnography and provide reference data for automatic sleep stage scoring systems. The reliability of manual scorers of polysomnography sleep stages was substantial. However, for certain stages, the results were poor; validity requires improvement.
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