| Literature DB >> 34836433 |
Alexandra Hemmer1, Julie Mareschal1, Charna Dibner2,3, Jacques A Pralong4, Victor Dorribo5, Stephen Perrig4, Laurence Genton1,6, Claude Pichard1,6, Tinh-Hai Collet1.
Abstract
Energy metabolism is tightly linked with circadian rhythms, exposure to ambient light, sleep/wake, fasting/eating, and rest/activity cycles. External factors, such as shift work, lead to a disruption of these rhythms, often called circadian misalignment. Circadian misalignment has an impact on some physiological markers. However, these proxy measurements do not immediately translate into major clinical health outcomes, as shown by later detrimental health effects of shift work and cardio-metabolic disorders. This review focuses on the effects of shift work on circadian rhythms and its implications in cardio-metabolic disorders and eating patterns. Shift work appears to be a risk factor of overweight, obesity, type 2 diabetes, elevated blood pressure, and the metabolic syndrome. However, past studies showed discordant findings regarding the changes of lipid profile and eating patterns. Most studies were either small and short lab studies, or bigger and longer cohort studies, which could not measure health outcomes in a detailed manner. These two designs explain the heterogeneity of shift schedules, occupations, sample size, and methods across studies. Given the burden of non-communicable diseases and the growing concerns about shift workers' health, novel approaches to study shift work in real contexts are needed and would allow a better understanding of the interlocked risk factors and potential mechanisms involved in the onset of metabolic disorders.Entities:
Keywords: cardiovascular disease; circadian misalignment; eating patterns; metabolic disease; shift work
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34836433 PMCID: PMC8617838 DOI: 10.3390/nu13114178
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Population, design, shift work definition(s) and exposure, and main outcomes of the reviewed studies 1.
| Ref. | Loc. | N. | Sex | Occupation | Design | Type of Shift Work | Exposure and Definition(s) of Shifts | Main Outcomes | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MetS | BMI | Gluc. | CVD | BP | Lip. | Nut. | ||||||||
| [ | USA | 14 | Both | n.s. | Lab study | Simulated | x | x | ||||||
| [ | USA | 14 | Both | n.s. | Lab study, | Simulated | x | x | x | x | ||||
| [ | USA | 9 | Both | n.s. | Lab study, | Simulated | x | x | x | |||||
| [ | USA | 12 | Both | Healthcare | Lab study, | Simulated | x | |||||||
| [ | AUS | 17 | Both | n.s. | Lab study | Simulated | x | |||||||
| [ | AUS | 16 | Both | n.s. | Lab study, | Simulated | x | |||||||
| [ | AUS | 22 | Both | Private companies | Randomized | Night shift work | x | x | ||||||
| [ | USA | 14 | Both | Healthcare | Cross-sectional, | Day, night, and rotating shift work | x | x | x | x | x | |||
| [ | USA | 24 | Fem. | Healthcare | Cross-sectional, | Day and night shift work, without rotating shift work | x | x | x | |||||
| [ | CAN | 73 | Fem. | Healthcare | Cross-sectional, | Evening and night shift work, including irregular or rotating schedules | x | x | x | |||||
| [ | KOR | 9989 | Fem. | Healthcare | Cross-sectional, | n.s. | x | x | ||||||
| [ | POL | 522 | Fem. | Healthcare | Cross-sectional, | Rotating shift work | x | x | x | |||||
| [ | CHE | 65 | Male | Private and public institutions | Cross-sectional, | Rotating shift work | x | x | x | |||||
| [ | GBR | 20 | Fem. | Healthcare | Cross-sectional, | Rotating shift work | x | |||||||
| [ | AUS | 63 | Both | Mixed | Cross-sectional, | Night and rotating shift work | n.s. | x | ||||||
| [ | BEL | 1529 | Male | Private and public institutions | Cohort, | Rotating shift work | x | x | x | x | x | |||
| [ | USA | 54,724 | Fem. | Healthcare | Cohort, | Day/evenings only, nights only, early mornings only, rotating with nights, or rotating with no nights | x | x | x | x | x | x | ||
| [ | USA | 177,184; 143,410 | Fem. | Healthcare | Cohort, | Rotating shift work | x | x | x | x | x | |||
| [ | DNK | 19,873 | Fem. | Healthcare | Cohort, | Night, evening, or rotating shift work | n.s. | x | x | x | x | x | ||
| [ | CHN | 3871 | Both | Private companies | Cohort, | Night shift work: permanent, rotating, or irregular work | x | x | ||||||
| [ | NOR | 2965 | Both | Healthcare | Cohort, | Day, evening, night, and rotating shift work | x | |||||||
| [ | NLD | 485; 596 | Both | Healthcare | Cohort, | Day, evening, night, and rotating shift work | x | x | x | |||||
| [ | NLD | 1061 | Both | Healthcare | Cohort, | Day, evening, night, and rotating shift work | x | x | x | |||||
| [ | Intl | n.a. | Both | Mixed | Systematic review and meta-analysis 15 | Night shift work | x | x | x | x | x | |||
| [ | Intl | n.a. | Both | Mixed | Systematic review and meta-analysis15 | Rotating shift work and other types of shift work (mixed) | Any work outside of daytime hours | x | ||||||
| [ | Intl | n.a. | Both | Mixed | Systematic review and meta-analysis 15 | n.s. | n.s. | x | ||||||
| [ | Intl | n.a. | Both | Mixed | Systematic review and meta-analysis 15 | Night shift work | x | |||||||
| [ | Intl | n.a. | Both | Mixed | Systematic review and meta-analysis 15 | n.s. | Any work outside of daytime hours (from 09:00 to 17:00) | x | ||||||
| [ | Intl | n.a. | Both | Healthcare | Systematic review and meta-analysis 15 | n.s. | Any work outside of daytime hours | x | ||||||
| [ | Intl | n.a. | Both | Mixed | Systematic review and meta-analysis 15 | n.s. | n.s. | x | ||||||
| [ | Intl | n.a. | Both | Mixed | Systematic review and meta-analysis 15 | Night, rotating and uncategorized shift work | x | |||||||
| [ | Intl | n.a. | Both | Mixed | Systematic review and meta-analysis 15 | Rotating shift work and other types of shift work (mixed) | Permanent night shift or rotating shift, or work arrangements differing from daytime hours (from 07:00–08:00 to 17:00–18:00) | x | ||||||
| [ | Intl | n.a. | Both | Mixed | Systematic review and meta-analysis 15 | Night and rotating shift work | n.s. | x | ||||||
| [ | Intl | n.a. | Both | Mixed | Systematic review and meta-analysis 15 | Permanent night shift work or rotating shift work | x | |||||||
| [ | Intl | n.a. | Both | Mixed | Systematic review and meta-analysis 15 | Night shift work | x | |||||||
| [ | Intl | n.a. | Both | Mixed | Systematic review and meta-analysis 15 | Day, evening, night, and rotating shift work | x | |||||||
| [ | Intl | n.a. | Both | Mixed | Systematic review | Night and rotating shift work | n.s. | x | ||||||
| [ | Intl | n.a. | Both | Mixed | Systematic review | Rotating shift work and other types of shift work (mixed) | Any work outside of daytime hours | x | ||||||
Abbreviations: BMI, Body mass index; BP, Blood Pressure; CVD, Cardiovascular disease; Fem, Female; Gluc, Glucose metabolism; Intl, International (multiple countries); Lip, Lipid profile; Loc, Location (3-letter country code); MetS, Metabolic syndrome; N., Number of participants (for individual studies); n.a., not applicable; n.s., not specified; Nut, Nutrition/eating patterns; Ref, Reference(s). 1 See accompanying text in Section 3 and Section 4 for details on the reviewed studies focusing on shift work. 2 Study results adjusted for sex, age, BMI, and occupation. 3 Study results adjusted for age. 4 Study results adjusted for age, BMI, breakfast skipping, physical activity, alcohol consumption, smoking status, marital status, family income, education, sleep, self-reported health status. 5 Study results adjusted for age, waist to hip ratio, height, gastro-intestinal diseases, diabetes, concomitant medication, smoking, season, number of children, job duration, chronotype. 6 Study results adjusted for total energy intake, the workplace. 7 Study results adjusted for age, ethnicity, BMI, metabolic factors (waist circumference, diastolic BP and HDL cholesterol), family history of diabetes, menopausal status, total energy intake, dietary score, physical activity, alcohol consumption, smoking status, concomitant drugs. 8 Study results adjusted for age, ethnicity, BMI, family history of diabetes, menopausal status, total energy intake, dietary score, physical activity, alcohol consumption, smoking status, concomitant drugs, marital status, health status. 9 Study results adjusted for age, BMI, acute myocardial infarction, hypertension, intake of fatty meat, fruit and vegetables, physical activity, alcohol consumption, smoking status, marital status, employment status. 10 Study results adjusted for sex, age, intake of fruit and vegetable, physical activity, alcohol consumption, smoking status, marital status, education, working hours, sleep, mental stress. 11 Study results adjusted for sex, age, BMI, marital status, children living at home, education. 12 Study results adjusted for sex, age, physical activity, smoking status, marital status, education, occupation, working hours. 13 Study results adjusted for sex, age, alcohol consumption, smoking status, education, occupation, self-reported health status. 14 Study results adjusted for sex, age, concomitant medication, education, chronotype. 15 The meta-analyses listed above included source studies that adjusted for different confounding factors, but also some studies with no adjustment. We refer the reader to the original articles for further details.