Utility of the Sleep Disorders Inventory for Students in Clinically Referred Youth With Insomnia: Risk Identification and Relationship With Polysomnographic Measures

Behavioral Sleep Medicine
Danielle M Graef, Kelly C Byars

Abstract

Objective/Background: This study evaluated the overall performance of the Sleep Disorders Inventory for Students (SDIS) in identifying sleep disorders risk and the sensitivity and specificity of specific SDIS subscales in a clinically referred sample of youth with insomnia. Participants: Youth (N = 1,329, M = 2.5-18.99 years) with insomnia, of whom 392 underwent clinically indicated diagnostic PSG within ± 6 months of SDIS screening. Methods: Risk identification for sleep disturbance warranting sleep specialist evaluation was determined based on elevation on any SDIS scale for the entire sample. Patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) and periodic limb movement disorder (PMLD) based on PSG were evaluated in relation to SDIS-OSA and SDIS-PLMD subscales (T-scores ≥ 60), with sensitivity, specificity, and receiver operator characteristic curves computed. Results: Clinical elevation correctly identified 74.0% to 83.6% referred to a sleep specialist. Nearly 30% of the subsample undergoing PSG met criteria for OSA and 20.2% had PLMs. The SDIS-OSA subscale demonstrated low to fair sensitivity and specificity. The SDIS-PLMD subscale displayed low sensitivity and low (children) to fair (adolescents) specificity, with the area under ...Continue Reading

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Citations

May 12, 2020·Frontiers in Psychiatry·Tabitha Sen, Karen Spruyt

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