Division of Sleep and Circadian Disorders, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA, USA.
Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Sleep. 2023 Sep 8;46(9). doi: 10.1093/sleep/zsad048.
Multiple sleep characteristics are informative of health, sleep characteristics cluster, and sleep health can be described as a composite of positive sleep attributes. We assessed the association between a sleep score reflecting multiple sleep dimensions, and mortality. We tested the hypothesis that more favorable sleep (higher sleep scores) is associated with lower mortality.
The Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis (MESA) is a racially and ethnically-diverse multi-site, prospective cohort study of US adults. Sleep was measured using unattended polysomnography, 7-day wrist actigraphy, and validated questionnaires (2010-2013). 1726 participants were followed for a median of 6.9 years (Q1-Q3, 6.4-7.4 years) until death (171 deaths) or last contact. Survival models were used to estimate the association between the exposure of sleep scores and the outcome of all-cause mortality, adjusting for socio-demographics, lifestyle, and medical comorbidities; follow-up analyses examined associations between individual metrics and mortality. The exposure, a sleep score, was constructed by an empirically-based Principal Components Analysis on 13 sleep metrics, selected a priori.
After adjusting for multiple confounders, a 1 standard deviation (sd) higher sleep score was associated with 25% lower hazard of mortality (Hazard Ratio [HR]: 0.75; 95% Confidence interval: [0.65, 0.87]). The largest drivers of this association were: night-to-night sleep regularity, total sleep time, and the Apnea-Hypopnea Index.
More favorable sleep across multiple characteristics, operationalized by a sleep score, is associated with lower risk of death in a diverse US cohort of adults. Results suggest that interventions that address multiple dimensions may provide novel approaches for improving health.
多项睡眠特征可反映健康状况,睡眠特征具有聚类性,而睡眠健康可被描述为积极睡眠属性的综合体现。我们评估了反映多个睡眠维度的睡眠评分与死亡率之间的关联。我们检验了这样一个假设,即更优的睡眠(更高的睡眠评分)与更低的死亡率相关。
动脉粥样硬化多民族研究(MESA)是一项在美国成年人中进行的、基于种族和民族多样性的、多地点、前瞻性队列研究。使用无人值守多导睡眠图、7 天腕动图和经过验证的问卷(2010-2013 年)来测量睡眠。对 1726 名参与者进行了中位数为 6.9 年(四分位距 6.4-7.4 年)的随访,直至死亡(171 例死亡)或最后一次联系。生存模型用于估计睡眠评分与全因死亡率之间的关联,同时调整了社会人口统计学、生活方式和合并症;随访分析检查了个体指标与死亡率之间的关联。该暴露因素,即睡眠评分,是通过对 13 项睡眠指标进行基于经验的主成分分析构建的,这些指标是预先选择的。
在校正了多个混杂因素后,睡眠评分每增加 1 个标准差(SD),死亡风险降低 25%(风险比 [HR]:0.75;95%置信区间:[0.65,0.87])。该关联的最大驱动因素是:夜间睡眠的规律性、总睡眠时间和呼吸暂停低通气指数。
在一个多样化的美国成年人队列中,通过睡眠评分体现的多个特征的更优睡眠与死亡风险降低相关。结果表明,针对多个维度的干预措施可能为改善健康提供新方法。