Proper Karin I, van de Langenberg Daniëlla, Rodenburg Wendy, Vermeulen Roel C H, van der Beek Allard J, van Steeg Harry, van Kerkhof Linda W M
National Institute for Public Health and the Environment, Bilthoven, the Netherlands; Department of Public and Occupational Health, EMGO+ Institute for Health and Care Research, VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam, the Netherlands;.
Institute for Risk Assessment Sciences, Utrecht University, Utrecht, the Netherlands.
Am J Prev Med. 2016 May;50(5):e147-e157. doi: 10.1016/j.amepre.2015.11.013. Epub 2016 Jan 22.
Although the metabolic health effects of shift work have been extensively studied, a systematic synthesis of the available research is lacking. This review aimed to systematically summarize the available evidence of longitudinal studies linking shift work with metabolic risk factors.
A systematic literature search was performed in 2015. Studies were included if (1) they had a longitudinal design; (2) shift work was studied as the exposure; and (3) the outcome involved a metabolic risk factor, including anthropometric, blood glucose, blood lipid, or blood pressure measures.
Eligible studies were assessed for their methodologic quality in 2015. A best-evidence synthesis was used to draw conclusions per outcome. Thirty-nine articles describing 22 studies were included. Strong evidence was found for a relation between shift work and increased body weight/BMI, risk for overweight, and impaired glucose tolerance. For the remaining outcomes, there was insufficient evidence.
Shift work seems to be associated with body weight gain, risk for overweight, and impaired glucose tolerance. Overall, lack of high-methodologic quality studies and inconsistency in findings led to insufficient evidence in assessing the relation between shift work and other metabolic risk factors. To strengthen the evidence, more high-quality longitudinal studies that provide more information on the shift work schedule (e.g., frequency of night shifts, duration in years) are needed. Further, research to the (mediating) role of lifestyle behaviors in the health effects of shift work is recommended, as this may offer potential for preventive strategies.
尽管已对轮班工作的代谢健康影响进行了广泛研究,但仍缺乏对现有研究的系统综述。本综述旨在系统总结将轮班工作与代谢风险因素联系起来的纵向研究的现有证据。
2015年进行了系统的文献检索。纳入的研究需满足以下条件:(1)具有纵向设计;(2)将轮班工作作为暴露因素进行研究;(3)结局涉及代谢风险因素,包括人体测量、血糖、血脂或血压指标。
2015年对符合条件的研究进行了方法学质量评估。采用最佳证据综合法针对每个结局得出结论。纳入了39篇描述22项研究的文章。有强有力的证据表明轮班工作与体重增加/体重指数升高、超重风险及糖耐量受损之间存在关联。对于其余结局,证据不足。
轮班工作似乎与体重增加、超重风险及糖耐量受损有关。总体而言,缺乏高质量的方法学研究以及研究结果的不一致导致在评估轮班工作与其他代谢风险因素之间的关系时证据不足。为了加强证据,需要更多高质量的纵向研究,提供更多关于轮班工作时间表的信息(如夜班频率、年限)。此外,建议研究生活方式行为在轮班工作健康影响中的(中介)作用,因为这可能为预防策略提供潜力。