| Literature DB >> 24127816 |
Susan Hurley, David O Nelson, Erika Garcia, Robert Gunier, Andrew Hertz, Peggy Reynolds.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is accumulating evidence that circadian disruption, mediated by alterations in melatonin levels, may play an etiologic role in a wide variety of diseases. The degree to which light-at-night (LAN) and other factors can alter melatonin levels is not well-documented. Our primary objective was to evaluate the degree to which estimates of outdoor environmental LAN predict 6-sulftoxymelatonin (aMT6s), the primary urinary metabolite of melatonin. We also evaluated other potential behavioral, sociodemographic, and anthropomorphic predictors of aMT6s.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24127816 PMCID: PMC3766028 DOI: 10.1186/1476-072X-12-39
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Health Geogr ISSN: 1476-072X Impact factor: 3.918
Characteristics of study population (n = 303)
| Age at urine collection, years (mean,standard deviation) | 55.0 (11.9) |
| BMI at urine collection, kg/m2 (mean,standard deviation) | 26.6 (5.8) |
| Height at CTS baseline survey, inches (mean,standard deviation) | 65.0 (2.7) |
| Packyears of smoking (mean,standard deviation) | 4.0 (10.0) |
| Pillyears of aspirin use (mean,standard deviation) | 0.69 (2.0) |
| Coffee consumption, average grams/day (mean,standard deviation) | 238.2 (184.7) |
| Coffee consumption, average times/day (mean,standard deviation) | 0.97 (0.72) |
| Strenuous exercise, 3-years prior to baseline, hours/wk (mean,standard deviation) | 1.6 (2.4) |
| Strenuous exercise, lifetime prior to baseline, hours/wk (mean,standard deviation) | 2.2 (2.3) |
| Age at first full-term pregnancy, years (mean,standard deviation) | 27.0 (4.9) |
| Parity, total number of live and still births (mean,standard deviation) | 1.7 (1.4) |
| Race/ethnicity (n,%) | |
| Non-Hispanic white | 258 (85.1) |
| Hispanic | 18 (5.9) |
| Black | 3 (1.0) |
| Asian & Pacific Islander | 13 (4.3) |
| Other/unknown | 11 (3.6) |
| Menopausal Status, at baseline(n,%) | |
| Postmenospausal | 131 (43.2) |
| Premenopausal or Perimenopausal | 147 (48.5) |
| Unknown | 25 (8.3) |
| Alcohol Consumption, year prior to baseline (n, %) | |
| None | 86 (28.4) |
| <20 g/day | 176 (58.1) |
| ≥20 g/day | 27 (8.9) |
| Unknown | 14 (4.6) |
| Tobacco Smoke Exposure, at baseline (n, %) | |
| None | 61 (20.1) |
| Passive only | 142 (46.9) |
| Former active smoker | 86 (28.4) |
| Current active smoker | 12 (4.0) |
| Unknown | 2 (0.7) |
| Oral contraceptive use, at baseline (n, %) | |
| Never | 81 (26.7) |
| Former | 198 (65.4) |
| Current | 16 (5.3) |
| Unknown | 8 (2.6) |
| Antidepressant use, daily use for at least 2 months at baseline | |
| Yes | 29 (9.6) |
| No | 237 (78.2) |
| Unknown | 37 (12.2) |
| Hormone therapy use, at baseline (n, %) | |
| Premenopausal | 142 (46.9) |
| Peri/post-menopausal, never used | 34 (11.22) |
| Peri/post-menopausal, prior use | 16 (5.3) |
| Peri/post-menopasual, current use | 71 (23.4) |
| Other/unknown | 40 (13.2) |
| Regular aspirin use, years at baseline | |
| None | 240 (79.2) |
| <1 | 11 (3.6) |
| 1 | 2 (0.7) |
| 2 | 4 (1.3) |
| 3-4 | 7 (2.3) |
| 5-9 | 6 (2.0) |
| 10+ | 31 (10.2) |
| Unknown/missing | 2 (0.7) |
| Regular aspirin use, days/week at baseline | |
| None | 240 (79.2) |
| 1-3 | 41 (13.5) |
| 4-6 | 9 (3.0) |
| 7 | 12 (4.0) |
| Unknown | 1 (0.3) |
| Daily Use of Calcium Blockers, in 2000 | |
| Yes | 4 (1.3) |
| No | 246 (81.2) |
| Unknown | 53 (17.5) |
| Neighborhood Urbanization | |
| Urban | 120 (39.6) |
| Rural | 183 (60.4) |
| Hours of sleep/night | |
| <5 hours | 3 (1.0) |
| 5-6 hours | 63 (20.8) |
| 7-9 hours | 226 (74.6) |
| 10+ hours | 4 (1.3) |
| Unknown | 7 (2.3) |
| Neighborhood Socioeconomic Status (mean, range) | |
| Median Family Income ($) | 76,782 (37,337-140,387) |
| Percent of population below poverty level | 6.8 (0.0 – 37.6) |
| Percent of adults age 25+ with college degree | 34.3 (1.5 – 79.0) |
| Percent of adults without a high school degree | 14.6 (1.2 – 56.8) |
| Percent of adults employed in a professional occupation | 44.3 (6.7-74.3) |
Estimates of outdoor LAN among study participants (n = 303)
| Outdoor LAN satellite values (annual average radiance) | |
| Low-dynamic range, 2000 average (DN units) | 43.4 (4 – 63) |
| High-dynamic range, 2006 average (scaled radiance units) | 128.4 (3.8 – 465.2) |
| Length-of-night on day of urine collection (hours) | 11 (9.2 – 14.4) |
Figure 1Marginal distribution of Outdoor LAN estimates and distribution by urban classification for the low-dynamic range (year 2000) and the high-dynamic range (year 2006) data. The units in the “low dynamic range” data are “DN” units, while the units in the “high dynamic range data” are scaled radiance units (see Methods).
Figure 2Estimated relationship between neighborhood SES and aMT6s, along with the pointwise 95% confidence band (shaded in gray). The relationship increases until SES equals zero, at which point it flattens out and no statistically significant slope remains (the dashed vertical line indicated where the SES PCA component is equal to zero). The lines across the bottom indicate the SES values for the sample. Note that the spline only shows deviation of aMT6s relative to the average aMT6s value across the sample.
Regression coefficients (β) for final model estimating logcreatinine-adjusted aMT6s
| All Subjects | Length-of-night | 0.1081, 0.0612 | 1.76 (0.08) |
| | Age | −0.0113, 0.0066 | −1.79 (0.09) |
| | SES | 0.1375, 0.0637 | 2.16 (0.03) |
| Ages > 55 years | Length-of-night | 0.2341, 0.0963 | 2.43 (0.02) |
| Age | −0.0284, 0.0152 | −1.87 (0.06) |