Chaput Jean-Philippe, Biswas Raaj Kishore, Ahmadi Matthew, Cistulli Peter A, Rajaratnam Shantha M W, Bian Wenxin, St-Onge Marie-Pierre, Stamatakis Emmanuel
Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario Research Institute, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Department of Pediatrics, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
J Epidemiol Community Health. 2025 Mar 10;79(4):257-264. doi: 10.1136/jech-2024-222795.
This study examines the associations between device-measured sleep regularity and the risk of major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE), and aims to determine whether sufficient sleep duration attenuates or eliminates the effects of irregular sleep on MACE risk.
A prospective cohort study of adults aged 40-79 years from the UK Biobank who wore wrist-attached accelerometers for 7 days was conducted. Sleep Regularity Index (SRI) scores were calculated for each participant using a validated algorithm, and categorised as irregular (SRI <71.6), moderately irregular (SRI between 71.6 and 87.3), and regular (SRI >87.3 (reference group)). Information on MACE and its subtypes (myocardial infarction, heart failure, stroke) was obtained from inpatient hospitalisation and death records.
We analysed data from 72 269 individuals followed for 8 years, without a previous history of MACE and without an event in the first year of follow-up. Irregular (HR 1.26, 95% CI 1.16 to 1.37) and moderately irregular sleepers (HR 1.08, 95% CI 1.01 to 1.70) were at higher risk of MACE compared with regular sleepers. Dose-response analyses treating SRI as a continuous measure showed that SRI was associated with MACE risk in a near-linear fashion, with a steeper MACE risk reduction at higher (better) SRI scores. Joint SRI and sleep duration analyses showed that meeting the age-specific sleep duration recommendation offsets MACE risk for moderately irregular sleepers (HR 1.07, 95% CI 0.96 to 1.18), but not for irregular sleepers (HR 1.19, 95% CI 1.06 to 1.35).
Irregular sleep was strongly associated with higher MACE risk. Adequate sleep duration was not sufficient to offset these adverse effects among irregular sleepers. This study supports the inclusion of sleep regularity in public health guidelines and clinical practice as a risk factor for cardiovascular disease.
本研究探讨了通过设备测量的睡眠规律性与主要不良心血管事件(MACE)风险之间的关联,旨在确定充足的睡眠时间是否会减弱或消除不规律睡眠对MACE风险的影响。
对来自英国生物银行的40-79岁成年人进行了一项前瞻性队列研究,这些参与者佩戴腕部加速度计7天。使用经过验证的算法为每位参与者计算睡眠规律性指数(SRI)得分,并将其分为不规律(SRI<71.6)、中度不规律(SRI在71.6至87.3之间)和规律(SRI>87.3(参考组))。从住院和死亡记录中获取有关MACE及其亚型(心肌梗死、心力衰竭、中风)的信息。
我们分析了72269名个体的数据,这些个体随访了8年,之前没有MACE病史,且在随访的第一年没有发生事件。与规律睡眠者相比,不规律睡眠者(HR 1.26,95%CI 1.16至1.37)和中度不规律睡眠者(HR 1.08,95%CI 1.01至1.70)发生MACE的风险更高。将SRI作为连续变量进行的剂量反应分析表明,SRI与MACE风险呈近似线性关系,在较高(较好)的SRI得分时,MACE风险降低更为明显。SRI与睡眠时间的联合分析表明,达到特定年龄的睡眠时间建议可抵消中度不规律睡眠者的MACE风险(HR 1.07,95%CI 0.96至1.18),但不能抵消不规律睡眠者的MACE风险(HR 1.19,95%CI 1.06至1.35)。
不规律睡眠与较高的MACE风险密切相关。充足的睡眠时间不足以抵消不规律睡眠者的这些不良影响。本研究支持将睡眠规律性作为心血管疾病的一个风险因素纳入公共卫生指南和临床实践。