Introduction
Postoperative delirium (PD) is a state of acute and fluctuating brain dysfunction, manifested by inattention, disorganised thinking and altered states of consciousness,Reference Lipowski1 which can commonly occur during the 3 days after surgery.Reference Munk, Andersen and Møller2 In previous studies, relative to patients undergoing non-cardiac surgeries, post-cardiac surgery patients demonstrated a much higher incidence of delirium, of 5%–72%.Reference Sockalingam, Parekh and Bogoch3,Reference Koster, Oosterveld, Hensens, Wijma and van der Palen4 Delirium can significantly increase the incidence of adverse events and even the chance of a 30-day death after surgery.Reference Koster, Hensens and van der Palen5–Reference Krzych, Wybraniec and Krupka-Matuszczyk7
Sleep disorder (SPD) is a common issue among adults given their accelerated social rhythm, frequent change of life style, and factors that have close relationships with psychological illness.Reference Olini, Rothfuchs, Azzinnari, Pryce, Kurth and Huber8,Reference Williams, Grandner and Wallace9 Some studies have found that both preoperative obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) through sleep-disordered breathing and postoperative poor sleep quality exhibit significant correlations with PD.Reference Roggenbach, Klamann, von Haken, Bruckner, Karck and Hofer10–Reference Chung, Liao and Yang13 Additionally, patients with cardiac disease display higher incidence of SPD due to frequent cardiac pain and discomfort, as well as long-term psychological pressure.Reference Yatsu, Kasai and Suda14–Reference Madsen, Huang, Zangger, Zwisler and Gögenur16 However, no previous systematic prospective studies have evaluated the effect of preoperative chronic SPD on PD for patients following cardiac surgery.
Methods
This article describes a prospective observational cohort study. The Ethics Committee of the Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences Fuwai Hospital in Beijing approved this study, and all patients provided written informed consent. The inclusion criteria included (1) age ≥ 18 years and (2) the patient undergoing valve surgery on pump. The exclusion criteria included (1) having a history of delirium or dementia; (2) having a history of brain surgery, cerebral haemorrhage or infarction; (3) having preoperative myasthenia gravis; (4) having grade IV cardiac function (New York Heart Association); (5) having death chances expected within 48 hours after surgery; (6) going through another surgery within seven postoperative days; (7) having serious preoperative liver (Child-Pugh grading C) and renal (stage 3–4 according to Chronic Kidney Disease grading) dysfunction and (8) being unable to communicate due to hearing and/or language issues.
All patients underwent open heart cardiac valve surgery on pump under general anaesthesia of the same anaesthesia programme. General anaesthesia intravenous medications included midazolam, sufentanil, etomidate, and cisatracurium. Anaesthetics sustaining anaesthesia included: propofol, sufentanil, dexmedetomidine, cisatracurium and sevoflurane. A Bispectral Index (BIS) was used to monitor the depth of anaesthesia having maintained BIS values between 40 and 60 during surgery. A normal body temperature was maintained except for light hypothermia (nasopharyngeal temperature: 30–34°C) during aortic clamping. Anticholinergics were prohibited perioperatively due to the possible occurrence of latent mental disorder.
The Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) has proven to be an effective method to assess sleep quality. It includes 18 items in seven parts, and its score ranges from 0 to 21 (Supplementary file 1). A score of five in the PSQI is regarded as a cutoff point of SPD for adults. The higher the PSQI score is, the more serious the SPD is.Reference Buysse, Reynolds, Monk, Berman and Kupfer17 The sleep quality of participants throughout a month before hospital admission was assessed through the PSQI.
We evaluated the preoperative cognitive state of participants through the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) which has been found to have higher sensitivity than the Mini-Mental State Examination.Reference Dong, Sharma and Chan18 The total score of the MoCA is 30. An individual is said to have cognitive dysfunction if the score is less than 21.Reference Dong, Sharma and Chan18
The Confusion Assessment Method for Intensive Care Unit (CAM-ICU) is widely used to assess delirium. CAM-ICU is subdivided into four parts: (1) acute change of mental status and behaviour during the past 24 hours; (2) inattention; (3) disordered thinking and (4) altered state of consciousness (Supplementary file 2). The diagnosis of delirium is made when items (1), (2) and (3) or (4) are met.Reference Ely, Inouye and Bernard19 However, before the mental status of a patient was assessed, their sedation level was evaluated by the Richmond Agitation-Sedation Scale (RASS) first (Supplementary file 3). Only when the RASS score was −3 or more was the assessment of delirium processed through CAM-ICU.Reference Sessler, Gosnell and Grap20 Additionally, delirium can be divided into three types according to RASS scores: (1) hypoactive type: when the RASS score is less than 0; (2) hyperactive type: when the RASS score is more than 0 and (3) mixed: hypoactive and hyperactive types alternately occuring.Reference Peterson, Pun and Dittus21 The delirium was assessed only once in the first 24 hours, and the time of assessment was as close as possible to 24 hours of the end of the surgery to minimise the impact of anaesthetics on the consciousness of patients. From the second to the seventh day postoperatively, delirium was assessed twice daily (8:00–10:00 and 18:00–20:00).Reference Silverstein, Timberger, Reich and Uysal22,Reference Su, Meng and Wu23
All participants received a perfect analgesia score (Rest Numerical Rating Scale < 4) after surgery through intravenous sufentanil, dezocine and/or acetaminophen. When needed, propofol and/or midazolam were used to sedate patients. Dexmedetomidine and/or haloperidol were injected to control delirium episodes.
The variables included gender, age, body mass index, educational level, alcohol abuse history, smoking, preoperative PSQI score, preoperative MoCA score, anaesthesia duration, surgery, cardiopulmonary bypass, aortic clamping and hypothermia, post-surgery intubation time, ICU stay, the number of patients receiving sedatives and opioid analgesics postoperatively and number of patients diagnosed with PD. We divided all participants into two groups according to the diagnosis of PD: (1) the no PD (NPD) group and (2) the PD group.
Statistical Analysis
SPSS 22.0 (IBM Corp., Armonk, NY, USA) was used to analyse the data. The normality of the continuous variable distribution was determined through the Kolmogorov–Smirnov test. Continuous variables of normal distribution were presented as mean ± standard deviation and the data of abnormal distribution as median, interquartile range and range. Categorical variables were expressed as percentages. Continuous variables were analysed through Student’s t-test and Mann–Whitney U-test, and categorical variables through Pearson’s chi-square test. A multivariate logistic regression model was used to analyse the correlation of PD and covariates that were found to be associated with delirium in the univariate analysis. An area under curve (AUC) was generated from the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve to display the diagnostic accuracy of preoperative PSQI score on PD. We used a binomial logistic regression to analyse the association between preoperative sleep quality and PD based on PSQI values (two groups: 0–5 and 6–21). Significance was marked by a p value of less than 0.05.
Sample Size Calculation
The incidence of PD was about 50% for patients with poor sleep quality according to previous studies.Reference Flink, Rivelli and Cox24 A decrease of nearly 40% in incidence of PD occurred when patient sleep quality improved.Reference Patel, Baldwin, Bunting and Laha25 The odds ratio (OR) was of about 5.24 for the risk of PD in patients with SPD,Reference Fadayomi, Ibala, Bilotta, Westover and Akeju26 and the proportion of patients in the SPD group and those in the no SPD group was 1:1. The minimum sample size of 65 patients in the SPD group was detected when choosing a power of 90% and a two-sided α of 0.05. Finally, we found that the total minimum sample size of 130 was required.
Results
From May 22 to July 29, 2019, 207 adult patients undergoing cardiac valve surgery on pump were consecutively included, 21 of these were excluded based on the exclusion criteria. The 186 eligible patients (SPD: 106 participants; no SPD: 80 participants) were divided into two groups according to PD: (1) NPD: n = 157 (84.4%) and (2) PD: n = 29 (15.6%). From the total of 157, 83 (52.9%) patients without PD had preoperative SPD, and 23 (79.3%) of 29 patients with PD suffered from preoperative chronic SPD. No patient died or withdrew during the follow-up period (Figure 1).
The univariate analysis of the baseline values and general characteristics of participants is shown in Table 1. Risk factors associated with PD were male (p = 0.040), age (p = 0.009), preoperative SPD (p = 0.008), intraoperative infusion volume (p = 0.034), postoperative intubation time (p = 0.001) and ICU stay (p = 0.009).
SD = standard deviation.
a Alcohol abuse was defined as alcohol intake more than twice daily.
b Smoking was defined as current smoking or smoking cessation of less than 6 month.
The multivariate logistic regression analysis of age, intraoperative infusion volume, postoperative intubation time and ICU stay as continuous variables and male gender and preoperative SPD as categorical variables showed that age (OR: 1.106; 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.043–1.173; p = 0.001) and preoperative SPD (OR: 3.223; 95% CI: 1.017–10.211; p = 0.047) were significantly associated with PD after adjustment for covariates (Table 2).
A binomial logistic regression analysis performed to assess the relationship between preoperative PSQI scores and PD found no significant association among patients with preoperative 0–5 scores (OR: 1.106; 95% CI: 0.595–2.059; p = 0.749), but a significant association was found for patients with 6–21 scores (OR: 0.828; 95% CI: 0.720–0.953; p = 0.009) (Table 3). The ROC curve showed that the preoperative PSQI score had a certain predictive value for PD (AUC: 0.706; 95% CI: 0.595–0.816) (Figure 2).
Discussion
We assessed preoperative sleep quality and PD of all participants through the method of questionnaire surveys. The researchers who performed PD assessment were unaware of the patients’ sleep quality before surgery. Dexmedetomidine is regarded as an effective drug to prevent PD attack due to its functions of anti-anxiety, improvement of sleep quality, and analgesia.Reference Faritus, Khazaee-Koohpar, Ziyaeifard and Mehrabanian27–Reference Hwang, Chang, Park, Kwon and Hwang29 All enrolled patients in this study received routine dexmedetomidine infusion during surgery; meanwhile, dexmedetomidine was prohibited after surgery except for delirium occurrence. Therefore, all participants in this study had the same baseline for dexmedetomidine administration. This study demonstrated that long-term preoperative SPD was an important risk factor associated with PD for post-cardiac valve surgery. Furthermore, the PSQI was predictive of PD, especially for patients with PSQI scores higher than 6.
PD is a common complication for patients following cardiacReference Järvelä, Porkkala, Karlsson, Martikainen, Selander and Bendel30,Reference Smulter, Lingehall and Gustafson31 and major non-cardiac surgeries.Reference Hirsch, DePalma, Tsai, Sands and Leung32 Previous studies determined several risk factors associated with PD, including advanced age, low education level, preoperative cognitive dysfunction, smoking, cardiac or macrovascular surgery, major non-cardiac surgeries, perioperative use of sedative and analgesic drugs, postoperative imperfect analgesia, among others.Reference Kang, Seo and Kim33–Reference Rudolph, Jones, Rasmussen, Silverstein, Inouye and Marcantonio35 Preoperative or postoperative OSA has also been regarded as a risk factor of PD based on previous clinical studies.Reference Roggenbach, Klamann, von Haken, Bruckner, Karck and Hofer10,Reference Krenk and Kehlet36,Reference Flink, Rivelli and Cox37 However, no previous studies have reported the effect of preoperative long-term insomnia induced by anxiety, depression, non-psychotic, and non-OSA factors on PD. The PSQI exhibits a sensitivity of 89.6% and a specificity of 86.5% in distinguishing good and poor sleep quality;Reference Buysse, Reynolds, Monk, Berman and Kupfer17 it can analyse SPD induced by anxiety, depression, breathing disorders, and other factors, being able to describe sleep conditions comprehensively and in detail.Reference Buysse, Reynolds, Monk, Berman and Kupfer17
SPD can provoke cognitive and behavioural dysfunctions. Chronic insomnia induced by anxiety and depression is associated with memory impairment, dementia and inattention, including impaired alerting behaviour, orienting and executive control.Reference Kim, Kim and Kim38–Reference Li, Liu and Weed40 Similarly, OSA-related chronic intermittent hypoxia and hypercapnia can also hinder attention, memory and cognition.Reference Shen, Kung, Chang, Hong and Wang41,Reference Kung, Shen, Chang, Hong and Wang42 Specifically, how SPD generates cognitive and behavioural dysfunction is still unclear. A large number of cortisol production induced by hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal axis hyperactivity may be a possible mechanism that explains how SPD influences cognitive and behavioural dysfunction. Studies have reported a potential mechanism in which cortisol is transferred to the central nervous system leading to apoptosis of neurons in hippocampal area through activating brain-derived neurotrophic growth factor-tropomyosin-related kinase B signalling pathway.Reference Gray, Milner and McEwen43–Reference Polman, Hunter and Speksnijder46 Long-term OSA-related hypoxia and hypercapnia can impair vascular endothelial cells and enhance sensitivity of the vasoconstrictive response to vasoconstrictive mediators. It can also produce inflammation and oxidative stress response leading to an hypercoagulative state, increasing the risk of vascular dementia.Reference Lal, Strange and Bachman47,Reference Butt, Dwivedi, Khair and Lip48 Moreover, neuronal apoptosis induced by SPD, related to autonomic nervous system imbalance, may also constitute pathogenic factors of cognitive and behavioural dysfunction.Reference Fullagar, Skorski, Duffield, Hammes, Coutts and Meyer49 In addition, preoperative cognitive dysfunction is closely associated with PD.Reference Robinson, Wu, Pointer, Dunn and Moss50 Therefore, the relevance of studying the impact of preoperative sleep quality on PD for post-cardiac surgery patients is clear.
In the current study, we found six possible risk factors associated with PD through the univariate analysis, including gender (male), age, preoperative SPD, intraoperative infusion volume, postoperative intubation time and ICU stay. However, none were determined because of their interaction of each other. Hence, we adjusted covariates through a multivariate logistic regression model, which showed age and preoperative SPD as reliable independent risk factors. AUC generated from the ROC curve can predict the diagnostic value of a risk factor to the outcome. An AUC of over 0.70 means that a given risk factor has a certain accuracy in predicting outcome.Reference Hanley and McNeil51 We performed the ROC curve to observe the effect of preoperative PSQI scores on incidence of PD and obtained an AUC of 0.706 and found that preoperative PSQI score is a predictor of PD. Furthermore, the analysis of PSQI scores showed that there was no significant association between scores and PD among patients with scores 0–5, but a significant association was displayed for patients with 6–21 scores. These results hinted that the diagnostic value of PSQI scores in PD is mainly reflected in patients with sleep disorders.
Our study has some advantages in demonstrating preoperative SPD is associated with PD. First, patients were undergoing selective cardiac valve surgery to decrease confounding factors produced by different surgical types. Second, the programme of general anaesthesia was standardised to decrease the possibility of a narcotic administration bias. Third, patients were required to be over the age of 18, so this can explain the effect of preoperative SPD on PD in adults of all ages, not just in older adults. Fourth, the comprehensive evaluation of sleep problems through the PSQI included insomnia induced by anxiety, depression, non-psychotic factors and sleep disturbance breathing produced by OSA. Fifth, the author’s institute is a word-class centre for cardiac and macrovascular diseases, and advanced valve surgeries techniques were applied to decrease the bias caused by different surgical methods.
On the other hands, there are limitations in this study. First, we may have missed delirium occurrence at the follow-up time, implying a higher incidence of PD possibly occurs, and we are unsure of how a higher incidence of PD could influence the outcome. Second, PSQI and CAM-ICU are both self-report questionnaires for sleep quality and delirium, and therefore, some bias in the diagnoses of SPD and delirium was inevitable. Third, we did not find any cases of delirium occurring in those younger than 40 years; thereby, a large-scale questionnaire investigation including more patients should be performed to further verify the association of preoperative SPD and PD, even though the number of participants in this study is over the required minimum sample size.
Conclusions
This study demonstrated that preoperative SPD is an independent risk factor leading to PD for patients following cardiac valve surgery. Furthermore, it was found that preoperative PSQI scores have a predictive value for occurrences of PD. This study, therefore, provides evidence that preoperative sleep quality improvement might become an effective method to decrease the incidence of PD. It is noteworthy to add that special attention from anaesthetists, surgeons and doctors in the ICU is necessary for patients with preoperative SPD, in order to take effective preventive measures to avoid the occurrence of delirium.
Acknowledgments
We are grateful to Professor Wang Yang from the Departments of Statistics for supervising the statistical analysis and other experts who provided valuable suggestions for our work.
Disclosures
The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare.
Statement of Authorship
HW contributed to study design, screening of patients, data collection and drafting of the manuscript. LZ performed the preoperative sleep quality and cognition assessment. YL was responsible for PD assessment. QL collected data and carried out the statistical analysis. FY supervised the entire test process and guaranteed the accuracy of the data.