This issue has two linked reviews on paediatric obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) by Pabla and colleagues.Reference Pabla, Duffin, Flood and Blackmore1, Reference Pabla, Duffin, Flood and Blackmore2 This follows on from many articles in The Journal of Laryngology & Otology on this perennially interesting topic, notably those concerning cardiopulmonary aspects of paediatric OSA,Reference Mahajan, Thakur, Azad, Mohindroo and Negi3 the assessment of paediatric OSA,Reference Sharma, Kanona, Kumar and Kotecha4 tonsillotomy versus tonsillectomy,Reference Wood, Cho and Carney5 and the use of adenoidectomy alone.Reference Reckley, Song, Chang, Cable, Certal and Camacho6 These two reviews cover such controversies as tonsillotomy versus tonsillectomy, anaesthetic considerations, post-operative monitoring, determination of when a threshold is reached at which treatment is required, and the wider medical aspects of sleep apnoea in children.
Polysomnography services for children in the average UK unit are limited, and using US criteria they would be rapidly swamped by demand, so only a minority of otolaryngologists use this routinely. Overnight oximetry is one of many screening methods, as are questionnaires, but is such screening adequate? The authors note that OSA in children should not be assumed to be the same qualitatively as in adults, with a ‘good’ or a ‘bad’ night (compared to ‘usual’) potentially distorting a test result and leading to possible under- or over-treatment.
Well-defined assessment criteria that link well with outcomes of treatment seem to be some way off, as is knowledge of the threshold at which significant neurocognitive, behavioural, metabolic or cardiac morbidity is likely to occur and so needs active intervention. This threshold may be lower than we currently believe. Is obesity part of the result of OSA, part of the cause of it, or both?
The increasing prevalence of obesity in childhood has now reached worrying levels (28 per cent of 2–15 year olds were found to be overweight in 2015), so reviewing the medical aspects of paediatric sleep-disordered breathing is particularly topical. Similarly, the difficulty of dealing with a child after adenotonsillectomy, usually but not always obese, who still has significant sleep apnoea, is acknowledged and explored in these reviews. The authors draw from paediatric and other medical literature that is otherwise unlikely to be read by a general otolaryngologist. As with all useful reviews, there are more questions than answers.