Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Sciences, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA.
RTI International, Research Triangle Park, NC.
Am J Obstet Gynecol MFM. 2019 Nov;1(4):100040. doi: 10.1016/j.ajogmf.2019.100040. Epub 2019 Sep 9.
Although uterine contractions have a diurnal periodicity and increase in frequency during hours of darkness, data on the relationship between sleep duration and sleep timing patterns and preterm birth are limited.
We sought to examine the relationship of self-reported sleep duration and timing in pregnancy with preterm birth.
In the prospective Nulliparous Pregnancy Outcome Study: Monitoring Mothers-to-be cohort, women completed a survey of sleep patterns at 6-13 weeks gestation (visit 1) and again at 22-29 weeks gestation (visit 3). Additionally, at 16-21 weeks gestation (visit 2), a subgroup completed a weeklong actigraphy recording of their sleep. Weekly averages of self-reported sleep duration and sleep midpoint were calculated. A priori, sleep duration of <7 hours was defined as "short," and sleep midpoint after 5 am was defined as "late." The relationships among these sleep characteristics and all preterm birth and spontaneous preterm birth at <37 weeks gestation were examined in univariate analyses. Multivariable logistic regressions that controlled for age and body mass index alone (model 1) and with additional covariates (race, smoking, insurance, and employment schedule) following a backward elimination process (model 2) were performed.
Of the 10,038 women who were enrolled, sleep survey data were available on 7524 women at visit 1 and 7668 women at visit 3. The rate of short sleep duration was 17.1% at visit 1 and 20.7% at visit 3. The proportion with a late sleep midpoint was 11.6% at visit 1 and 12.2% at visit 3. There was no significant relationship between self-reported short sleep and preterm birth across all visits. However, self-reported late sleep midpoint (>5 am) was associated with preterm birth . Women with a late sleep midpoint (>5 am) in early pregnancy had a preterm birth rate of 9.5%, compared with 6.9% for women with sleep midpoint ≤5 am (P=.005). Similarly, women with a late sleep midpoint had a higher rate of spontaneous preterm birth (6.2% vs 4.4%; P=.019). Comparable results were observed for women with a late sleep midpoint at visit 3 (all preterm birth 8.9% vs 6.6%; P=.009; spontaneous preterm birth 5.9% vs 4.3%; P=.023). All adjusted analyses on self-reported sleep midpoint (models 1 and 2) maintained statistical significance (P<.05), except for visit 1, model 2 for spontaneous preterm birth (P=.07). The visit 2 objective data from the smaller subgroup (n=782) demonstrated similar trends in preterm birth rates by sleep midpoint status.
Self-reported late sleep midpoint in both early and late pregnancy, but not short sleep duration, is associated with an increased rate of preterm birth.
尽管子宫收缩具有昼夜周期性,并且在夜间黑暗时频率增加,但关于睡眠时间和睡眠模式与早产之间关系的数据有限。
我们旨在研究孕妇自我报告的睡眠时间和时间与早产之间的关系。
在前瞻性的初产妇妊娠结局研究:监测孕妇队列中,女性在 6-13 周妊娠时(访视 1)和 22-29 周妊娠时(访视 3)完成了一项睡眠模式调查。此外,在 16-21 周妊娠时(访视 2),一个亚组完成了一周的睡眠活动记录仪记录。自我报告的每周睡眠时间和睡眠中点平均值。预先定义,睡眠时间<7 小时为“短”,睡眠中点晚于 5 点为“晚”。在单变量分析中,研究了这些睡眠特征与所有早产和自发性早产<37 周之间的关系。在单独控制年龄和体重指数的多变量逻辑回归(模型 1)以及通过向后消除过程(模型 2)控制其他协变量(种族、吸烟、保险和就业时间表)后,进行了多变量逻辑回归。
在 10038 名入组的女性中,有 7524 名女性在访视 1 时有睡眠调查数据,有 7668 名女性在访视 3 时有睡眠调查数据。在访视 1 时,短睡眠时间的发生率为 17.1%,在访视 3 时为 20.7%。在访视 1 时,有 11.6%的人睡眠中点较晚,在访视 3 时为 12.2%。在所有访视中,自我报告的短睡眠时间与早产之间没有显著关系。然而,自我报告的晚睡眠中点(>5 点)与早产有关。早期妊娠时睡眠中点晚(>5 点)的女性早产率为 9.5%,而睡眠中点≤5 点的女性早产率为 6.9%(P=.005)。同样,睡眠中点晚的女性自发性早产发生率较高(6.2%比 4.4%;P=.019)。在访视 3 时睡眠中点晚的女性也观察到类似的结果(所有早产 8.9%比 6.6%;P=.009;自发性早产 5.9%比 4.3%;P=.023)。除了访视 1、模型 2 中的自发性早产外(P=.07),所有关于自我报告的睡眠中点的调整分析(模型 1 和 2)均保持统计学意义(P<.05)。较小亚组(n=782)的访视 2 客观数据显示,根据睡眠中点状态,早产率也有类似的趋势。
孕妇自我报告的早期和晚期睡眠中点较晚,但睡眠时间较短,与早产发生率增加有关。