Phenotypes of sleep health among adults with chronic heart failure in a randomized controlled trial of cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia

被引:0
作者
Jeon, Sangchoon
Conley, Samantha
O'Connell, Meghan
Wang, Zequan
Redeker, Nancy S. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Yale Univ, Sch Nursing, West Haven, CT USA
[2] Univ Connecticut, Sch Nursing, Storrs, CT 06269 USA
基金
美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
Heart failure; Insomnia; Sleep; Sleep-disordered breathing; Circadian rhythms; Actigraphy; PERFORMANCE; SYMPTOMS; STATE;
D O I
10.1016/j.sleh.2024.09.006
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Background: Poor sleep contributes to adverse health in heart failure. However, studies are limited to isolated sleep characteristics. Purposes: To evaluate changes in sleep health phenotypes after cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia or attention control and associations between sleep health phenotypes, symptoms, stress, functional performance, and emergency department visits and hospitalizations. Methods: Secondary analysis of a randomized controlled trial of cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia among adults with heart failure. We measured sleep (rest-activity rhythms, sleep duration, quality, and efficiency, insomnia severity, daytime sleepiness), symptoms, cognitive ability, vigilance, and 6-minute walk distance at baseline and 3-, 6-, and 12-month postintervention and collected hospitalizations and emergency department visits. We used K-means cluster analysis and generalized linear mixed models, generalized estimating equations, and Cox proportional hazard models. Results: Among 166 participants (M age = 63.2 (SD = 12.6) years; 57% male; 23% New York Heart Association Class III/IV), there were four sleep health phenotypes ("Unstable Sleep" (15%); "Short Sleep" (39%); "Low Sleep Efficiency" (25%); and "Good Sleep" (21%)) at baseline. The healthiest phenotype was associated with the lowest fatigue. The proportions of participants in the healthiest sleep group increased from pre- to post-treatment. Low sleepiness (p = .0188) and a robust circadian quotient (p = .007) predicted transition to the healthiest phenotype. The poorest sleep phenotype at baseline predicted time to hospitalizations and emergency department visits (hazard ratios 0.35-0.60) after adjusting for covariates. Conclusion: Sleep phenotypes predict heart failure outcomes. Tailored interventions targeting phenotypes may be more effective than approaches that focus on single sleep characteristics. (c) 2024 National Sleep Foundation. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights are reserved, including those for text and data mining, AI training, and similar technologies.
引用
收藏
页码:705 / 712
页数:8
相关论文
共 44 条
[11]   Correlates of cognition among people with chronic heart failure and insomnia [J].
Geer, Jacqueline H. ;
Jeon, Sangchoon ;
O'Connell, Meghan ;
Linsky, Sarah ;
Conley, Samantha ;
Hollenbeak, Christopher S. ;
Jacoby, Daniel ;
Yaggi, H. Klar ;
Redeker, Nancy S. .
SLEEP AND BREATHING, 2023, 27 (04) :1287-1296
[12]   Associations of insomnia symptoms with sociodemographic, clinical, and lifestyle factors in persons with HF: Health and retirement study [J].
Gharzeddine, Rida ;
McCarthy, Margaret M. ;
Yu, Gary ;
Dickson, Victoria V. .
RESEARCH IN NURSING & HEALTH, 2022, 45 (03) :364-379
[13]   Costs and Resource Utilization of People with Stable Heart Failure and Insomnia: Evidence from a Randomized Trial of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia [J].
Hollenbeak, Christopher S. ;
Jeon, Sangchoon ;
O' Connell, Meghan ;
Conley, Samantha ;
Yaggi, Henry ;
Redeker, Nancy S. .
BEHAVIORAL SLEEP MEDICINE, 2024, 22 (03) :263-274
[14]   Evaluating PROMIS(®) applied cognition items in a sample of older adults at risk for cognitive decline [J].
Howland, Molly ;
Tatsuoka, Curtis ;
Smyth, Kathleen A. ;
Sajatovic, Martha .
PSYCHIATRY RESEARCH, 2017, 247 :39-42
[15]  
Javaheri Shahrokh, 2022, Handb Clin Neurol, V189, P295, DOI 10.1016/B978-0-323-91532-8.00009-4
[16]   Rest-activity rhythms predict time to hospitalizations and emergency department visits among participants in a randomized control of adults with heart failure and insomnia* [J].
Jeon, Sangchoon ;
Conley, Samantha ;
Hollenbeak, Christopher ;
O'Connell, Meghan ;
Wang, Zequan ;
Tocchi, Christine ;
Redeker, Nancy S. .
SLEEP MEDICINE, 2023, 108 :1-7
[17]   Rest-activity rhythms, daytime symptoms, and functional performance among people with heart failure [J].
Jeon, Sangchoon ;
Conley, Samantha ;
Redeker, Nancy S. .
CHRONOBIOLOGY INTERNATIONAL, 2020, 37 (08) :1223-1234
[18]   A NEW METHOD FOR MEASURING DAYTIME SLEEPINESS - THE EPWORTH SLEEPINESS SCALE [J].
JOHNS, MW .
SLEEP, 1991, 14 (06) :540-545
[19]   The Social Patterning of Sleep in African Americans: Associations of Socioeconomic Position and Neighborhood Characteristics with Sleep in the Jackson Heart Study [J].
Johnson, Dayna A. ;
Lisabeth, Lynda ;
Hickson, DeMarc ;
Johnson-Lawrence, Vicki ;
Samdarshi, Tandaw ;
Taylor, Herman ;
Roux, Ana V. Diez .
SLEEP, 2016, 39 (09) :1749-1759
[20]   Inverse relationship of subjective daytime sleepiness to mortality in heart failure patients with sleep apnoea [J].
Kasai, Takatoshi ;
Montemurro, Luigi Taranto ;
Yumino, Dai ;
Wang, Hanqiao ;
Floras, John S. ;
Newton, Gary E. ;
Mak, Susanna ;
Ruttanaumpawan, Pimon ;
Parker, John D. ;
Bradley, T. Douglas .
ESC HEART FAILURE, 2020, 7 (05) :2448-2454