The International Classification of Sleep Disorders (ICSD) is "a primary diagnostic, epidemiological and coding resource for clinicians and researchers in the field of sleep and sleep medicine".[1] The ICSD was produced by the American Academy of Sleep Medicine (AASM) in association with the European Sleep Research Society, the Japanese Society of Sleep Research, and the Latin American Sleep Society. The classification was developed as a revision and update of the Diagnostic Classification of Sleep and Arousal Disorders (DCSAD) that was produced by both the Association of Sleep Disorders Centers (ASDC) and the Association for the Psychophysiological Study of Sleep and was published in the journal Sleep in 1979.[2][3] A second edition, called ICSD-2, was published by the AASM in 2005.[4] The third edition, ICSD-3, was released by the AASM in 2014.[5] A text revision of the third edition (ICSD-3-TR) was published in 2023 by the AASM.[6]
Milestones of sleep disorder classifications
Year
ICSD
ICD
DSM
1974
DSM-III
1975
ICD-9
1979
Nosology
1980
ICD-CM
DSM-III
1987
DSM-III-R
1991
ICSD
1992
ICD-10
1994
DSM-IV
1997
ICSD-R
2000
DSM-IV-TR
2005
ICSD-2
2006
ICSD-2 Pocket Version
2010
ICD-10-CM
2014
ICSD-3
DSM-5
2015
ICD-11 Beta
2022
ICD-11
2023
ICSD-3-TR
DSM-5-TR
Introduction
In 1979, the first Diagnostic Classification of Sleep and Arousal Disorders (DCSAD) was developed by the Association of Sleep Disorders Centers (ASDC) and the Association for the Psychophysiological Study of Sleep. Disorders were divided into four main categories.[2][3]
Disorders of initiating and maintaining sleep (DIMS) – Insomnias
Disorders of Excessive somnolence (DOES) – Hypersomnias
Disorders of the Sleep-Wake Schedule – Circadian Disorders
Dysfunctions Associated with Sleep, Sleep Stages, or Partial Arousals – Parasomnias
In 1990, the first comprehensive classification of disorders of sleep and arousal, the International Classification of Sleep Disorders (ICSD-1990), was developed by the American Academy of Sleep Medicine (AASM) in association with the European Sleep Research Society, the Japanese Society of Sleep Research, and the Latin American Sleep Society.[7] 84 sleep disorders were inventoried, based on pathophysiological characteristics. It was later revised as the ICSD-R in 1997.
The International Classification of Sleep Disorders (ICSD) uses a multiaxial system for stating and coding diagnoses both in clinical reports or for database purposes. The axial system uses International Classification of Diseases (ICD-9-CM) coding wherever possible. Additional codes are included for procedures and physical signs of particular interest to sleep disorders clinicians and researchers. Diagnoses and procedures are listed and coded on three main "axes". The axial system is arranged as follows:[1]
Axis A ICSD Classification of Sleep Disorders
Axis B ICD-9-CM Classification of Procedures
Axis C ICD-9-CM Classification of Diseases (nonsleep diagnoses).
ICSD-I (1990) and ICSD-Revised (1997)
Dyssomnias
Intrinsic Sleep Disorders
Extrinsic Sleep Disorders
Circadian Rhythm Sleep Disorders
Parasomnias
Arousal Disorders
Sleep-Wake Transition Disorders
Parasomnias Usually Associated with REM Sleep
Other Parasomnias
Sleep Disorders Associated with Mental, Neurologic, or Other Medical Disorders
Associated with Mental Disorders
Associated with Neurologic Disorders
Associated with Other Medical Disorders
Proposed Sleep Disorders
Shorter Sleeper
Long Sleeper
Menstrual-Associated Sleep Disorders
ICSD-2
In 2005, the International Classification of Sleep Disorders underwent minor updates and modifications resulting in version 2 (ICSD-2).[4]
ICSD-2
ICD-9-CM
ICD-10-CM
Insomnia: Insomnia is defined as the subjective perception of difficulty with sleep initiation, duration, consolidation, or quality that occurs despite adequate opportunity for sleep, and that results in some form of daytime impairment.[4]
Adjustment sleep disorder (acute insomnia)
307.41
F 51.02
Psychophysiological insomnia
307.42
F 51.04
Paradoxical insomnia (formerly sleep state misperception)
307.42
F 51.03
Idiopathic insomnia
307.42
F 51.01
Insomnia due to mental disorder
307.42
F 51.05
Inadequate sleep hygiene
V69.4
Z72.821
Behavioral insomnia of childhood
307.42
—
- Sleep-onset association type
—
z73.810
- Limit-setting sleep type
—
z73.811
- Combined type
—
Z73.812
Insomnia due to drug or substance
292.85
G47.02
Insomnia due to medical condition (code also the associated medical condition)
327.01
G47.01
Insomnia not due to a substance or known physiological condition, unspecified
The ICSD-2 thus lists 81 sleep disorder diagnostic categories divided in 8 major categories. Each diagnostic is detailed in a description that presents the diagnostic criteria. The 81 diagnostics are divided into 8 main categories, namely insomnias, sleep-related breathing disorders, hypersomnias of central origin, circadian rhythm sleep disorders, parasomnias, sleep-related movement disorders, isolated symptoms apparently normal variants and unresolved issues, other sleep disorders. The two last categories (i.e. sleep disorders associated with disorders classified elsewhere and psychiatric disorders frequently encountered in the differential diagnosis of sleep disorders) are presented in the appendices and count 13 diagnostics.[7]
In 2006, a pocket version of the ICSD-2 was released. In this version, a pediatric section was added listing the following diagnostic categories:
Behavioural Insomnia in Childhood
Onset Type
Limit Setting Type
Primary Sleep Apnea of Infancy
Obstructive Sleep Apnea, Pediatric
Congenital Central Alveolar Hypoventilation Syndrome
However, this classification brought some confusion into the field, which led to the revision of the classification in 2011. The classification was much more discussed by experts of the field and led to the third edition of the ICSD.
ICSD-3 (2014) and ICSD-3-TR (2023)
The revision of the ICSD-2 was firstly made by the AASM and other International Societies. This revision integrates pediatric diagnosis into clinical adult diagnosis (except for obstructive sleep apnea) and led to the third edition of the ICSD, which was released in 2014.
ICSD-3 includes specific diagnoses within the seven major categories, as well as an appendix for classification of sleep disorders associated with medical and neurologic disorders. The International Classification of Diseases (ICD-9-CM and ICD-10-CM) codes corresponding to each specific diagnosis can be found within the ICSD-3.[5] Furthermore, pediatric diagnoses are not distinguished from adult diagnoses except for sleep-related breathing disorders.[8]
In addition, significant changes have been made in the nosology of insomnia, narcolepsy and parasomnia. Primary vs. secondary (i.e. comorbid) insomnia has been reunited into a single disorder: chronic insomnia. Narcolepsy has been divided into narcolepsy type 1 and narcolepsy type 2. These two types are distinguished by the presence or absence of cataplexy and the cerebrospinal fluid hypocretin-1 level. Concerning parasomnia, the sections have been modified, grouping together common features. Finally, a section on treatment-emerging CSA has been added to the CSA syndromes section.[8]
It also discusses common isolated symptoms and normal variants. Some occur during normal sleep: as an example, sleep talking occurs at some time in most normal sleepers. Some lie on the continuum between normal and abnormal: as an example, snoring without associated airway compromise, sleep disturbance, or other consequences is essentially normal, whereas heavy snoring is often part of obstructive sleep apnea.
Furthermore, some features are no longer disorders and are reunited in TheAASM [American Academy of Sleep Medicine] Manual for the Scoring of Sleep and Associated Events: Rules, Terminology and Technical Specifications. Therefore, ICSD permanently refers to this manual. The latter allows, for instance, to find definitions of polysomnography or specific features.[8]
The ICSD-3 counts 383 pages for 83 disorders. It is divided into 7 main categories:
^ abcAmerican Academy of Sleep Medicine (2005). International Classification of Sleep Disorders, second edition (ICSD-2). American Academy of Sleep Medicine. ISBN0-9657220-2-3.