Ren Xiyun, Wang Wentong, Li Wei, Sun Lishuang, Liu Tianyu, Zhou Haibo, Han Tianshu, Sun Changhao, Lu Xiangfeng, Tian Wenjing
Department of Epidemiology, School of Public Health, Harbin Medical University, Heilongjiang Province, Harbin, 150081, P.R. China.
Key Laboratory of Precision Nutrition and Health, Ministry of Education. Department of Nutrition and Food Hygiene, School of Public Health, Harbin Medical University, Heilongjiang Province, Harbin, 150081, P.R. China.
BMC Public Health. 2025 Apr 7;25(1):1304. doi: 10.1186/s12889-025-22536-3.
Menopausal women undergo substantial physiological changes that can impact their overall health.
We examined relationships between circadian rest-activity rhythms (CRARs) and multimorbidity progression in this population.
We used UK Biobank data, involving 10,138 participants, who were initially free of chronic conditions. We primarily focused on the relative amplitude (RA) of CRARs, tracking incident first chronic conditions (FCC), multimorbidity, and all-cause mortality. Multimorbidity was indicated by the presence of any 2/35 chronic conditions during the follow-up period. We used a multi-state model to assess the RA impact on the multimorbidity progression trajectory, encompassing transition from health to an FCC, to consequent multimorbidity, and ultimately to mortality, in parallel with sensitivity analyses to ensure results stability and reliability.
During a mean 8.13-year follow-up period, we identified 855 incident multimorbidity cases and recorded 88 deaths. In a multi-state model, a lower RA was associated with an increased risk of transition from health to FCC onset [hazard ratio (HR): 1.18, 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.07-1.31] and also from an FCC to multimorbidity development (HR: 1.34, 95% CI: 1.12-1.61), even after adjusting for several confounding factors.
Among menopausal women, circadian rhythm disturbance increased the risk of transitioning from health to a single chronic condition, as well as transitioning from a single chronic condition to multimorbidity.
更年期女性会经历重大的生理变化,这些变化会影响她们的整体健康。
我们研究了该人群中昼夜休息 - 活动节律(CRARs)与多种疾病进展之间的关系。
我们使用了英国生物银行的数据,涉及10138名最初无慢性病的参与者。我们主要关注CRARs的相对振幅(RA),跟踪首次发生的慢性病(FCC)、多种疾病和全因死亡率。多种疾病通过随访期间出现任何2/35种慢性病来表明。我们使用多状态模型来评估RA对多种疾病进展轨迹的影响,包括从健康到FCC、再到随后的多种疾病,最终到死亡的转变,同时进行敏感性分析以确保结果的稳定性和可靠性。
在平均8.13年的随访期内,我们确定了855例新发多种疾病病例并记录了88例死亡。在多状态模型中,较低的RA与从健康到FCC发病转变的风险增加相关[风险比(HR):1.18,95%置信区间(CI):1.07 - 1.31],并且与从FCC到多种疾病发展的风险增加相关(HR:1.34,95%CI:1.12 - 1.61),即使在调整了几个混杂因素之后。
在更年期女性中,昼夜节律紊乱增加了从健康转变为单一慢性病以及从单一慢性病转变为多种疾病的风险。