The ADA says dentists should be screening their patients for sleep apnea and should be the professionals who make oral appliances.
In October 2017, the American Dental Association (ADA) adopted a policy on dentistry’s role in treating sleep-breathing disorders including obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). It emphasizes that all dentists should screen for sleep-breathing disorders and that dentists should be the professionals who fabricate oral appliances (with a physician’s prescription).
Sleep-breathing disorders are “recognized as potentially serious medical conditions caused by anatomical airway collapse and altered respiratory control mechanisms,” the ADA said in a written statement to Sleep Review. “As experts in the oral cavity, dentists are able to question patients about pertinent symptoms during routine dental evaluations, and refer patients to physicians for diagnosis. The policy was adopted to address dentistry’s growing role in the multidisciplinary care of patients with [sleep-breathing disorders].”
In a news release from October, the ADA lists key takeaways that describe the role dentists should play:
- assess patient risk for sleep-breathing disorders as part of a comprehensive medical and dental history and refer affected patients to appropriate physicians
- evaluate the use of oral appliance therapy and provide it for mild and moderate OSA when CPAP fails
- identify and address the side effects of oral appliance therapy
- communicate patients’ treatment progress with referring physician and other healthcare providers.
Another point made in the policy is dentists treating sleep-related breathing disorders should stay up-to-date on the disorders and training in dental sleep medicine with continuing education. When asked what education the ADA will be providing dentists about how to screen for sleep-breathing disorders, the ADA advised that is currently under consideration.
The policy, written by the ADA Council on Dental Practice, is a result of an evidence brief on the use of oral appliances for sleep-breathing disorders, which was developed by the ADA Council on Scientific Affairs. The ADA’s governing body, the House of Delegates, reviewed and made comments for the policy, which were incorporated into the final draft before the association finally adopted it this past fall.
The evidence brief that inspired the policy shows there is a large portion of people who could have undiagnosed sleep-breathing disorders that could potentially be identified and treated by dentists who abide by these policy guidelines. It states that the prevalence of OSA is “estimated to be 3% to 7% in men and 2% to 5% in women. Prevalence is higher (greater than 50%) in patients with cardiac or metabolic disorders, relative to the general population.”
The ADA does not yet have data on any recent increase in sleep-disordered breathing screenings at dental offices or how quickly the policy is being rolled out.
Dillon Stickle is associate editor for Sleep Review.
I don’t think dentists should be performing sleep studies
Since home sleep testing (HST) is now simple, sensitive and specific, there is absolutely no reason why dentists should not do HST. There are many options and most provide accurate indications of the severity of obstructive sleep apnea. Dentists can than either refer the patient to a sleep physician so they can be prescribed nasal CPAP or, if the OSA is mild to moderate, the dentist could consider flitting the patient with a suitable mandibular repositioning device, such as a Narval.
Dentist should be involved with the recognition and treatment of OSA and SDB. Rather than looking at it as condition that is treated by either the physicians or dentists depending on the severity of the OSA and SDB, it should be treated by the dental and medical profession together, utilizing all the knowledge and treatment alternatives that both professions have at their disposal.
If only we could make that work there would be more whole health treatment and less costly preventative treatment measures could save us a bunch of federal funding.