Thurston Rebecca C, Chang Yuefang, Kline Christopher E, Swanson Leslie M, El Khoudary Samar R, Jackson Elizabeth A, Derby Carol A
Departments of Psychiatry (R.C.T.), University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, PA.
Department of Epidemiology, University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health, PA (R.C.T., S.R.E.K.).
Circulation. 2024 Feb 13;149(7):545-555. doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.123.066491. Epub 2024 Jan 29.
Up to 50% of women report sleep problems in midlife, and cardiovascular disease (CVD) is the leading cause of death in women. How chronic poor sleep exposure over decades of midlife is related to CVD risk in women is poorly understood. We tested whether trajectories of insomnia symptoms or sleep duration over midlife were related to subsequent CVD events among SWAN (Study of Women's Health Across the Nation) participants, whose sleep was assessed up to 16 times over 22 years.
At baseline, SWAN participants (n=2964) were 42 to 52 years of age, premenopausal or early perimenopausal, not using hormone therapy, and free of CVD. They completed up to 16 visits, including questionnaires assessing insomnia symptoms (trouble falling asleep, waking up several times a night, or waking earlier than planned ≥3 times/week classified as insomnia), typical daily sleep duration, vasomotor symptoms, and depressive symptoms; anthropometric measurements; phlebotomy; and CVD event ascertainment (ie, fatal or nonfatal myocardial infarction, stroke, heart failure, revascularization). Sleep trajectories (ie, insomnia, sleep duration) were determined by means of group-based trajectory modeling. Sleep trajectories were tested in relation to CVD in Cox proportional hazards models (multivariable models: site, age, race and ethnicity, education, CVD risk factors averaged over visits; additional covariates: vasomotor symptoms, snoring, depression).
Four trajectories of insomnia symptoms emerged: low insomnia symptoms (n=1142 [39% of women]), moderate insomnia symptoms decreasing over time (n=564 [19%]), low insomnia symptoms increasing over time (n=590 [20%]), and high insomnia symptoms that persisted (n=668 [23%]). Women with persistently high insomnia symptoms had higher CVD risk (hazard ratio, 1.71 [95% CI, 1.19, 2.46], =0.004, versus low insomnia; multivariable). Three trajectories of sleep duration emerged: persistently short (5 hours: n=363 [14%]), moderate (6 hours: n=1394 [55%]), and moderate to long (~8 hours: n=760 [30%]). Women with persistent short sleep had marginally higher CVD risk (hazard ratio, 1.51 [95% CI, 0.98, 2.33], =0.06, versus moderate; multivariable). Women who had both persistent high insomnia and short sleep had significantly elevated CVD risk (hazard ratio, 1.75 [95% CI, 1.03, 2.98], =0.04, versus low insomnia and moderate or moderate to long sleep duration; multivariable). Relations of insomnia to CVD persisted when adjusting for vasomotor symptoms, snoring, or depression.
Insomnia symptoms, when persistent over midlife or occurring with short sleep, are associated with higher CVD risk among women.
高达50%的女性报告在中年时存在睡眠问题,而心血管疾病(CVD)是女性的主要死因。中年时期数十年的慢性睡眠不佳与女性CVD风险之间的关系尚不清楚。我们测试了在全国女性健康研究(SWAN)参与者中,中年时期失眠症状或睡眠时间轨迹是否与随后的CVD事件相关,这些参与者的睡眠在22年中被评估了多达16次。
在基线时,SWAN参与者(n = 2964)年龄在42至52岁之间,处于绝经前或围绝经期早期,未使用激素治疗,且无CVD。他们完成了多达16次访视,包括评估失眠症状(入睡困难、夜间醒来几次或比计划提前醒来≥3次/周被归类为失眠)、典型每日睡眠时间、血管舒缩症状和抑郁症状的问卷;人体测量;静脉穿刺;以及CVD事件确定(即致命或非致命心肌梗死、中风、心力衰竭、血运重建)。睡眠轨迹(即失眠、睡眠时间)通过基于群体的轨迹建模确定。在Cox比例风险模型中测试睡眠轨迹与CVD的关系(多变量模型:地点、年龄、种族和民族、教育程度、各次访视平均的CVD危险因素;额外协变量:血管舒缩症状、打鼾、抑郁)。
出现了四种失眠症状轨迹:低失眠症状(n = 1142 [占女性的39%])、随时间减少的中度失眠症状(n = 564 [19%])、随时间增加的低失眠症状(n = 590 [20%])以及持续存在的高失眠症状(n = 668 [23%])。持续存在高失眠症状的女性CVD风险更高(风险比,1.71 [95% CI,1.19,2.46],P = 0.004,与低失眠相比;多变量)。出现了三种睡眠时间轨迹:持续短睡眠(约5小时:n = 编363 [14%])、中度睡眠(约6小时:n = 1394 [55%])和中度至长睡眠(约8小时:n = 760 [30%])。持续短睡眠的女性CVD风险略高(风险比,1.51 [95% CI,0.98,2.33],P = 0.06,与中度睡眠相比;多变量)。同时存在持续高失眠和短睡眠的女性CVD风险显著升高(风险比,1.75 [95% CI,1.03,2.98],P = 0.04,与低失眠和中度或中度至长睡眠时间相比;多变量)。在调整血管舒缩症状、打鼾或抑郁后,失眠与CVD的关系仍然存在。
失眠症状在中年时期持续存在或与短睡眠同时出现时,与女性较高的CVD风险相关。