| Literature DB >> 35296108 |
Soomi Lee1, Claire E Smith1, Meredith L Wallace2, Ross Andel1, David M Almeida3, Sanjay R Patel4, Orfeu M Buxton5.
Abstract
StudyEntities:
Keywords: cluster analysis; heart disease; middle adulthood; sleep health; sleep phenotypes; social disparities
Year: 2022 PMID: 35296108 PMCID: PMC8918427 DOI: 10.1093/sleepadvances/zpac005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sleep Adv ISSN: 2632-5012
Sleep facet measurement
| Dimension | Domain | Assessment | Cut point |
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| Consistency of sleep duration | Difference between workday sleep duration and non-workday sleep duration |
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| Please indicate how often you experience each of the following: |
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| Trouble falling asleep | Have trouble falling asleep. | ||
| Nocturnal awakenings | Wake up during the night and have difficulty going back to sleep. | ||
| Early awakenings | Wake up too early in the morning and be unable to get back to sleep. | ||
| Unrested upon waking | Feel unrested during the day, no matter how many hours of sleep you had. | ||
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| Nap frequency | During a usual week, how many times do you nap for 5 minutes or more? |
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| Sleep latency | How long does it usually take you to fall asleep at bedtime? |
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| Workday sleep duration | How much sleep do you usually get at night (or in your main sleep period) on weekdays or workdays? |
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To conduct supplementary clustering analyses (i.e., LCA), the continuous sleep characteristics were dichotomized to reflect desirable and undesirable categories for each. These values were then used as indicators in LCA.
Demographic information across the two samples
| Category |
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| Male | 43.70% | 46.92% |
| Female | 56.30% | 53.08% |
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| Non-Hispanic White | 79.19% | 81.59% |
| Black | 17.02% | 9.33% |
| Asian | 0.54% | 1.64% |
| All other races | 3.24% | 7.44% |
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| Did not graduate high school | 9.36% | 5.97% |
| High school degree | 26.64% | 16.42% |
| Some college, no degree | 21.62% | 17.76% |
| College degree | 25.12% | 34.76% |
| > Bachelor’s degree | 17.07% | 25.09% |
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| Unmarried | 31.24% | 30.49% |
| Married or cohabitating | 68.76% | 69.51% |
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| Worker | 61.65% | 64.00% |
| Retired | 25.21% | 23.62% |
| Not employed or retired (e.g., unemployed, laid off, disabled, homemaker, student, on leave) | 13.14% | 12.39% |
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| Nontraditional work schedule (i.e., works nights and/or weekends at least once per week) | 20.33% | 18.37% |
| Absence of nontraditional work schedule (i.e., nonworker or worker with a traditional work schedule) | 79.67% | 81.63% |
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| Current nonsmoker | 83.70% | 87.90% |
| Current smoker | 16.30% | 12.10% |
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Correlations and descriptive statistics
| M2 | MR | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | |||
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| 1. Irregularity | 0.65 | 1.01 | 0.69 | 0.95 | .001 | –.04 | .06 | –.23 | –.08 | |
| 2. Dissatisfaction | 2.54 | 0.92 | 2.58 | 0.92 | .001 | .08 | .50 | –.33 | .10 | |
| 3. Nap frequency | 2.09 | 2.56 | 1.86 | 2.46 | –.03 | .10 | .04 | –.08 | .07 | |
| 4. Inefficiency | 0.44 | 0.45 | 0.47 | 0.45 | .03 | .49 | .01 | –.19 | .08 | |
| 5. Duration | 6.84 | 1.37 | 6.97 | 1.27 | –.13 | –0.34 | –.10 | –.22 | .01 | |
| 6. Cardiovascular conditions | 19.37% | 15.86% | –.08 | .12 | .13 | .07 | –.05 |
M2 correlations are below the diagonal. MR correlations are above the diagonal.
** p < .001.
*p < .05.
Figure 1.Percent of each sleep class belonging to the suboptimal sleep categories across M2 and MR. Note. These values represent the percentage of each sleep class belonging to the suboptimal sleep category (i.e., irregular, inefficient, dissatisfied, suboptimal duration, frequent naps). Sample-specific differences in sleep characteristics across the napper and irregular sleeper classes are noted in parentheses.
Log-binomial regression of sleep classes predicting cardiovascular conditions in M2 and MR.
| Unadjusted | Adjusted | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| M2 Sample |
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| Dissatisfied/ inefficient | .22*+ [.05,.38] | .08 | 1.25*+ [1.05, 1.47] | .11 | .25*+ [.09,.42] | .09 | 1.29*+ [1.09, 1.52] | .11 | |
| Nappers (+poor night sleep) | .53*+ [.39,.67] | .07 | 1.71*+ [1.48, 1.96] | .12 | .32*+ [.18,.46] | .07 | 1.38*+ [1.20, 1.58] | .10 | |
| Irregular (+good night sleep) | –0.30*+ [–.49, –.10] | .10 | 0.74*+ [0.61, 0.90] | .07 | .01 [–.19,.20] | .10 | 1.01 [0.83, 1.58] | .10 | |
| MR Sample |
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| Dissatisfied/ inefficient | .56*+ [.37,.75] | .10 | 1.75*+ [1.44, 2.11] | .17 | .42*+ [.13,.71] | .15 | 1.53*+ [1.14, 2.04] | .23 | |
| Nappers (+good night sleep) | .37*+ [.16,.59] | .11 | 1.45*+ [1.17, 1.80] | .16 | .004 [–.30,.31] | .15 | 1.00 [0.74, 1.36] | .15 | |
| Irregular (+suboptimal duration) | –.19 [–.72,.33] | .27 | 0.82 [0.49, 1.40] | .22 | –.39 [–1.090,.30] | .35 | 0.67 [0.33, 1.35] | .24 |
+ indicates a statistically significant p-value (<.05) following Benjamini-Hochberg adjustment for multiple tests. * indicates statistical significance based on raw CI. CIs not containing 0 indicate a significant coefficient. CI not containing 1 indicates a significant risk ratio. Smoking status, BMI, depression, age, sex, race/ethnicity, education, marital status, and work status were included as covariates. Good sleepers were used as the reference group. Standardized coefficients are presented.
Figure 2.Risk ratios of cardiovascular conditions by sleep class, adjusted for covariates. Note. Good sleepers are the reference group. * indicates that the risk of cardiovascular conditions is significantly different from that of good sleepers (i.e., significantly different from 1 as marked by the solid black line).
Covariates of the sleep classes in M2 and MR using good sleepers as the reference group
| Sample | Sleep class | Age | Sex(0 = female, 1 = male) | Race/Ethnicity (0 = minority, 1 = non-Hispanic white) | Marital status (0 = not partnered, 1 = married/ cohabitating) | Education | Worker (0 = retired or unemployed, 1 = worker) | Retired (0 = worker or unemployed, 1 = retired) | Unemployed (0 = worker or retired, 1 = unemployed) | Smoker status (0 = nonsmoker, 1 = smoker) | BMI | Depression |
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| 0.01 ( | –0.04 ( |
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| –0.54 ( | 0.85 ( | 0.91 ( |
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| –0.42 ( | –0.37 ( | –0.06 ( | –0.43 ( | 0.73 ( | 0.16 ( |
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| –0.13 ( | –0.74 ( | –0.25 ( | –0.14 ( |
| –0.88 ( |
| –0.07 ( | 0.01 ( |
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| .003 ( | –.05 ( |
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| –1.08 ( | .44 ( | .17 ( |
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| .22 ( |
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| –3.53 ( | –2.49 ( | –2.96 ( | .29 ( | . |
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| –.19 ( | –.22 ( |
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| –.68 ( | –2.57 ( | –1.92 ( | .55 ( | .04 ( | .03 ( |
Note. Unstandardized coefficients. Three models were run: one including all sociodemographic covariates, one including work status covariates, and one including risk factor covariates. Significant relations are in bold.