Facial features analyzed from 3-D photographs could predict the likelihood of having obstructive sleep apnea, according to a study published in the April issue of the Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine.
Using 3-D photography, the study found that geodesic measurements—the shortest distance between two points on a curved surface—predicted with 89 percent accuracy which patients had sleep apnea. Using traditional 2-D linear measurements alone, the algorithm’s accuracy was 86 percent.
“This application of the technique used predetermined landmarks on the face and neck,” said principle investigator Peter Eastwood, who holds a doctorate in respiratory and sleep physiology and is the director of the Centre for Sleep Science at the University of Western Australia (UWA). “Geodesic and linear distances between these landmarks were determined, and a linear discriminant algorithm was trained, tested and used to classify an individual as being at high or low risk of having obstructive sleep apnea.”
The study involved 300 individuals with varying severity levels of sleep apnea and 100 people without sleep apnea. These individuals came from a local hospital and from the Raine Study, a longitudinal cohort study in Western Australia. All underwent overnight sleep studies and took 3-D photos with a craniofacial scanner system. Data were used to build a predictive algorithm that was tested on another patient set.
Eastwood worked with Syed Zulqarnain Gilani, a computer scientist at UWA to identify the facial features most commonly associated with sleep apnea as neck width and degree of retrusion of the lower jaw (retrognathia), but the study also uncovered other possible indicators.
“The data obtained from the present study indicate that other measurements such as width and length of the lower jaw, width of the face, and distance between the eyes also contribute to distinguishing individuals with and without OSA,” he said.
In a related commentary, also published in the April issue of JCSM, Drs. Ofer Jacobowitz and Stuart MacKay indicated that they see a bright future for 3-D photography as a screening tool, potentially combined with data from a patient’s digital health tracker and health history.
“Certain wearable devices are already capable of measuring pulse oximetry and some provide oximetry variability analysis,” they wrote. “Likewise, the home of tomorrow will likely incorporate sensors in the bedroom which may gather physiological sleep data using optical, acoustic, infrared, ultrasonographic or other means.”
According to Eastwood, existing studies show a genetic predisposition to sleep apnea, and facial structure is a significant component of such predisposition, leading researchers to seek an accessible, affordable method of screening based on facial characteristics. Eastwood believes that 3-D facial photography could represent the first, inexpensive, widely available screening tool for sleep apnea.
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