National Institute on Drug Dependence and Beijing Key Laboratory of Drug Dependence, Peking University, Beijing 100191, China; School of Public Health, Peking University, Beijing 100191, China.
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Beijing Shijitan Hospital, Capital Medical University, Beijing 100038, China.
Sleep Med Rev. 2021 Aug;58:101436. doi: 10.1016/j.smrv.2021.101436. Epub 2021 Jan 22.
Sleep disturbances are highly prevalent in pregnancy and are frequently overlooked as a potential cause of significant morbidity. The association between sleep disturbances and pregnancy outcomes remains largely controversial and needs to be clarified to guide management. To evaluate the association between sleep disturbances and maternal complications and adverse fetal outcomes, we performed a systematic search of PubMed, Embase and Web of Science for English-language articles published from inception to March 6, 2020, including observational studies of pregnant women with and without sleep disturbances assessing the risk of obstetric complications in the antenatal, intrapartum or postnatal period, and neonatal complications. Data extraction was completed independently by two reviewers. We utilized the Newcastle-Ottawa Scales to assess the methodological quality of included studies and random-effect models to pool the associations. A total of 120 studies with 58,123,250 pregnant women were included. Sleep disturbances were assessed, including poor sleep quality, extreme sleep duration, insomnia symptoms, restless legs syndrome, subjective sleep-disordered breathing and diagnosed obstructive sleep apnea. Significant associations were found between sleep disturbances in pregnancy and a variety of maternal complications and adverse fetal outcomes. Overall sleep disturbances were significantly associated with pre-eclampsia (odds ratio = 2.80, 95% confidence interval: 2.38-3.30), gestational hypertension (1.74, 1.54-1.97), gestational diabetes mellitus (1.59, 1.45-1.76), cesarean section (1.47, 1.31-1.64), preterm birth (1.38, 1.26-1.51), large for gestational age (1.40, 1.11-1.77), and stillbirth (1.25, 1.08-1.45), but not small for gestational age (1.03, 0.92-1.16), or low birth weight (1.27, 0.98-1.64). Sleep disturbances were related to higher morbidities in pregnant women who are 30 y or older and overweight before pregnancy. The findings indicate that sleep disturbances, which are easily ignored and treatable for both pregnant women and clinical services, deserve more attention from health care providers during prenatal counseling and health care services.
睡眠障碍在妊娠中非常普遍,但常被忽视,是导致严重发病率的潜在原因之一。睡眠障碍与妊娠结局之间的关联仍然存在很大争议,需要进一步明确以指导管理。为了评估睡眠障碍与产妇并发症和不良胎儿结局之间的关系,我们对从开始到 2020 年 3 月 6 日发表的英文文献进行了系统的 PubMed、Embase 和 Web of Science 检索,包括评估孕妇睡眠障碍与产科并发症风险的观察性研究,这些并发症发生在产前、产时或产后,以及新生儿并发症。数据提取由两名评审员独立完成。我们使用纽卡斯尔-渥太华量表来评估纳入研究的方法学质量,并使用随机效应模型来汇总关联。共纳入 120 项研究,涉及 58123200 名孕妇。评估了睡眠障碍,包括睡眠质量差、睡眠时间极端、失眠症状、不宁腿综合征、主观睡眠呼吸障碍和诊断为阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停。研究发现,妊娠期间的睡眠障碍与多种产妇并发症和不良胎儿结局显著相关。总的来说,整体睡眠障碍与子痫前期(比值比 2.80,95%置信区间:2.38-3.30)、妊娠期高血压(1.74,1.54-1.97)、妊娠期糖尿病(1.59,1.45-1.76)、剖宫产(1.47,1.31-1.64)、早产(1.38,1.26-1.51)、胎儿过大(1.40,1.11-1.77)和死胎(1.25,1.08-1.45)显著相关,但与胎儿过小(1.03,0.92-1.16)或低出生体重(1.27,0.98-1.64)无关。睡眠障碍与 30 岁及以上和妊娠前超重的孕妇的更高发病率相关。研究结果表明,睡眠障碍在孕妇和临床服务中都容易被忽视和治疗,在产前咨询和医疗保健服务中应引起医疗保健提供者的更多关注。