Department of Psychosis Studies, Institute of Psychology, Psychiatry and Neuroscience, King's College London, London, UK.
National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Biomedical Research Centre at South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust and King's College London, London, UK.
Psychol Med. 2022 Oct;52(13):2741-2750. doi: 10.1017/S0033291720004857. Epub 2021 Jan 12.
Sleep disruption is a common precursor to deterioration and relapse in people living with psychotic disorders. Understanding the temporal relationship between sleep and psychopathology is important for identifying and developing interventions which target key variables that contribute to relapse.
We used a purpose-built digital platform to sample self-reported sleep and psychopathology variables over 1 year, in 36 individuals with schizophrenia. Once-daily measures of sleep duration and sleep quality, and fluctuations in psychopathology (positive and negative affect, cognition and psychotic symptoms) were captured. We examined the temporal relationship between these variables using the Differential Time-Varying Effect (DTVEM) hybrid exploratory-confirmatory model.
Poorer sleep quality and shorter sleep duration maximally predicted deterioration in psychosis symptoms over the subsequent 1-8 and 1-12 days, respectively. These relationships were also mediated by negative affect and cognitive symptoms. Psychopathology variables also predicted sleep quality, but not sleep duration, and the effect sizes were smaller and of shorter lag duration.
Reduced sleep duration and poorer sleep quality anticipate the exacerbation of psychotic symptoms by approximately 1-2 weeks, and negative affect and cognitive symptoms mediate this relationship. We also observed a reciprocal relationship that was of shorter duration and smaller magnitude. Sleep disturbance may play a causal role in symptom exacerbation and relapse, and represents an important and tractable target for intervention. It warrants greater attention as an early warning sign of deterioration, and low-burden, user-friendly digital tools may play a role in its early detection.
睡眠障碍是精神障碍患者病情恶化和复发的常见前兆。了解睡眠与精神病理学之间的时间关系对于确定和开发干预措施至关重要,这些干预措施针对导致复发的关键变量。
我们使用专门设计的数字平台,在 36 名精神分裂症患者中,在 1 年内采样自我报告的睡眠和精神病理学变量。每天一次测量睡眠持续时间和睡眠质量,以及精神病理学(阳性和阴性情绪、认知和精神病症状)的波动。我们使用差分时变效应(DTVEM)混合探索性-验证性模型来检查这些变量之间的时间关系。
较差的睡眠质量和较短的睡眠时间最大程度地预测了随后 1-8 天和 1-12 天的精神病症状恶化。这些关系也通过负面情绪和认知症状来介导。精神病理学变量也预测了睡眠质量,但不预测睡眠持续时间,而且效应大小较小,滞后时间较短。
睡眠持续时间缩短和睡眠质量下降大约预测了 1-2 周后精神病症状的恶化,负面情绪和认知症状介导了这种关系。我们还观察到一种持续时间较短且幅度较小的相互关系。睡眠障碍可能在症状恶化和复发中起因果作用,并且是干预的重要且可行的目标。它值得作为病情恶化的早期预警信号引起更多关注,并且低负担、用户友好的数字工具可能在其早期检测中发挥作用。