Burgess Helen J, Troost Jonathan P, Rizvydeen Muneer, Kikyo Fumitaka, Kebbeh Nema, Tan Michael, Roecklein Kathryn A, King Andrea C, Hasler Brant P
Department of Psychiatry, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA.
Michigan Institute for Clinical and Health Research, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res (Hoboken). 2024 Apr;48(4):680-691. doi: 10.1111/acer.15280. Epub 2024 Mar 28.
While sleep and circadian rhythms are recognized contributors to the risk for alcohol use and related problems, few studies have examined whether objective sleep and circadian measures can predict future alcohol use in humans, and no such studies have been conducted in adults. This study examined whether any baseline sleep and/or circadian characteristics of otherwise healthy adults predicted their alcohol use over the subsequent 12 months.
Participants (21-42 years) included 28 light and 50 heavy drinkers. At baseline, a comprehensive range of self-reported and objective sleep/circadian measures was assessed via questionnaires, wrist actigraphy, and measurement of dim light melatonin onset and circadian photoreceptor responsivity. Following this, the number of alcoholic drinks per week and binge drinking episodes per month were assessed quarterly over the subsequent 12 months. Anticipated effects of alcohol (stimulation, sedation, and rewarding aspects) were also assessed quarterly over the 12 months. Analyses included generalized linear mixed-effects models and causal mediation analysis.
Across the range of measures, only self-reported insomnia symptoms and a longer total sleep time at baseline predicted more drinks per week and binges per month (ps <0.02). There was a trend for the anticipated alcohol effect of wanting more alcohol at the 6-month timepoint to mediate the relationship between insomnia symptoms at baseline and drinks per week at 12 months (p = 0.069).
These results suggest that in otherwise healthy adults, insomnia symptoms, even if subclinical, are a significant predictor of future drinking, and appear to outweigh the influence of circadian factors on future drinking, at least in otherwise healthy adults. Insomnia symptoms may be a modifiable target for reducing the risk of alcohol misuse.
虽然睡眠和昼夜节律被认为是导致酒精使用及相关问题风险的因素,但很少有研究探讨客观的睡眠和昼夜节律指标能否预测人类未来的酒精使用情况,且尚无针对成年人的此类研究。本研究调查了原本健康的成年人的任何基线睡眠和/或昼夜节律特征是否能预测他们在随后12个月内的酒精使用情况。
参与者年龄在21至42岁之间,包括28名轻度饮酒者和50名重度饮酒者。在基线时,通过问卷调查、手腕活动记录仪以及暗光褪黑素开始分泌时间和昼夜光感受器反应性的测量,对一系列全面的自我报告和客观睡眠/昼夜节律指标进行了评估。在此之后,在随后的12个月里每季度评估一次每周饮酒量和每月暴饮次数。在这12个月里还每季度评估一次对酒精的预期影响(刺激、镇静和奖赏方面)。分析包括广义线性混合效应模型和因果中介分析。
在所有测量指标中,只有自我报告的失眠症状以及基线时较长的总睡眠时间能预测每周饮酒量增加和每月暴饮次数增多(p值<0.02)。在6个月时间点想要更多酒精的预期酒精效应有介导基线时失眠症状与12个月时每周饮酒量之间关系的趋势(p = 0.069)。
这些结果表明,在原本健康的成年人中,失眠症状即使是亚临床的,也是未来饮酒的重要预测指标,而且似乎比昼夜节律因素对未来饮酒的影响更大,至少在原本健康的成年人中是这样。失眠症状可能是降低酒精滥用风险的一个可改变的目标。