Department of Epidemiology, School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, Tulane University, New Orleans, LA.
Pennington Biomedical Research Center, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA.
Diabetes. 2022 May 1;71(5):934-944. doi: 10.2337/db21-0699.
To examine associations between sleep disturbance and changes in weight and body composition and the mediating role of changes of appetite and food cravings in the Preventing Overweight Using Novel Dietary Strategies (POUNDS Lost) 2-year weight-loss diet intervention trial, this study included 810 overweight or obese individuals with baseline sleep disturbance assessment who were randomly assigned one of four diets varying in macronutrient composition. Changes in body weight and fat distribution were assessed by DEXA and computed tomography during the 2-year intervention. Participants were asked to provide sleep disturbance levels (no, slight, moderate, or great) at baseline and to recall their sleep disturbances since last visit at 6, 12, 18, and 24 months. Weight loss during the first 6 months was followed by 1.5 years of steady weight regain. Participants with greater sleep disturbance from baseline to 6 months showed significant losses of body weight (Ptrend <0.001) and waist circumference (Ptrend = 0.002) at 6 months, after multivariate adjustment. Compared with individuals without sleep disturbance at all from baseline to 6 months, those with slight, moderate, or great sleep disturbance showed an elevated risk of failure to lose weight (-5% or more loss) at 6 months, when the maximum weight loss was achieved, with an odds ratio of 1.24 (95% CI 0.87, 1.78), 1.27 (95% CI 0.75, 2.13), or 3.12 (95% CI 1.61, 6.03), respectively. In addition, we observed that the repeatedly measured levels of sleep disturbance over 2 years were inversely associated with the overall weight loss rate (weight changes per 6 months) (Ptrend <0.001). Further, sleep disturbances during weight loss from baseline to 6 months and weight regain from 6 months to 24 months were significantly predictive of total fat, total fat mass percent, and trunk fat percent changes during the 2 years. Our results also indicated that food cravings for carbohydrates/starches, fast food fats, and sweets; cravings, prospective consumption, hunger of appetite measurements; and dietary restraint, disinhibition, and hunger subscales measured at 6 months significantly mediated the effects of sleep disturbance on weight loss. In conclusion, our results suggested that more severe sleep disturbance during weight loss was associated with an elevated risk of failure to lose weight during the dietary intervention. Food cravings and eating behaviors may partly mediate these associations.
为了探究睡眠障碍与体重和身体成分变化之间的关系,以及在 Preventing Overweight Using Novel Dietary Strategies (POUNDS Lost) 为期 2 年的减肥饮食干预试验中,食欲和食物渴望变化的中介作用,本研究纳入了 810 名基线时存在睡眠障碍评估的超重或肥胖个体,他们被随机分配到四种不同宏量营养素组成的饮食组之一。在 2 年的干预过程中,通过 DEXA 和计算机断层扫描评估体重和脂肪分布的变化。参与者在基线时被要求提供睡眠障碍水平(无、轻微、中度或严重),并在 6、12、18 和 24 个月时回忆最近一次就诊时的睡眠障碍情况。在最初 6 个月的体重减轻后,接下来是 1.5 年的稳定体重反弹。与从基线到 6 个月睡眠障碍逐渐加重的参与者相比,经过多变量调整后,他们在 6 个月时体重(趋势 P<0.001)和腰围(趋势 P=0.002)显著下降。与从基线到 6 个月期间没有任何睡眠障碍的个体相比,那些有轻微、中度或严重睡眠障碍的个体在 6 个月时体重减轻达到最大值时,体重减轻失败的风险更高(减轻 5%或更多),优势比为 1.24(95%CI 0.87,1.78)、1.27(95%CI 0.75,2.13)或 3.12(95%CI 1.61,6.03)。此外,我们观察到,2 年内反复测量的睡眠障碍水平与整体减重率(每 6 个月体重变化)呈负相关(趋势 P<0.001)。进一步的,从基线到 6 个月的减肥期间和从 6 个月到 24 个月的体重恢复期间的睡眠障碍与 2 年内总脂肪、总脂肪百分比和躯干脂肪百分比的变化显著相关。我们的结果还表明,碳水化合物/淀粉、快餐脂肪和甜食的食物渴望;渴望、预期消费、食欲测量的饥饿感;以及在 6 个月时测量的饮食克制、抑制和饥饿子量表显著介导了睡眠障碍对减肥的影响。总之,我们的结果表明,在减肥过程中,更严重的睡眠障碍与饮食干预期间减肥失败的风险增加有关。食物渴望和饮食行为可能部分介导了这些关联。