Protocol for a prospective, multi-centric, cross-sectional cohort study to assess personal light exposure

Carolina Guidolin, Ljiljana Udovicic, Kai Broszio, David Baeza Moyano, Sofia Melero-Tur, Guadalupe Cantarero-Garcia, Roberto Alonso Gonzalez-Lezcano, Sam Aerts, John Bolte, Hongli Joosten-Ma, Maria Nilsson Tengelin, Oliver Stefani, Altug Didikoglu, Johannes Zauner, Manuel Spitschan
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Abstract

Light profoundly impacts many aspects of human physiology and behaviour, including the synchronization of the circadian clock, the production of melatonin, and cognition. These effects of light, termed the non-visual effects of light, have been primarily investigated in laboratory settings, where light intensity, spectrum and timing can be carefully controlled to draw associations with physiological outcomes of interest. Recently, the increasing availability of wearable light loggers has opened the possibility of studying personal light exposure in free-living conditions where people engage in activities of daily living, yielding findings associating aspects of light exposure and health outcomes, supporting the importance of adequate light exposure at appropriate times for human health. However, comprehensive protocols capturing environmental (e.g., geographical location, season, climate, photoperiod) and individual factors (e.g., culture, personal habits, behaviour, commute type, profession) contributing to the measured light exposure are currently lacking. Here, we present a protocol that combines smartphone-based experience sampling (ESM implementing Karolinska Sleepiness Scale, KSS, ratings) and high-quality light exposure data collection at three body sites (near-corneal plane between the two eyes mounted on spectacle, neck-worn pendant/badge, and wrist-worn watch-like design) to capture daily factors related to individuals' light exposure. We will be implement the protocol in an international multi-centre study to investigate the environmental and socio-cultural factors influencing light exposure patterns in Germany, Netherlands, Spain, Sweden, and Turkey (minimum n=15, target n=30 per site, minimum n=75, target n=150 across all sites). With the resulting dataset, lifestyle and context-specific factors that contribute to healthy light exposure will be identified. This information is essential in designing effective public health interventions.
评估个人光照的前瞻性、多中心、横断面队列研究方案
光对人类生理和行为的许多方面都有深远影响,包括昼夜节律的同步、褪黑激素的产生和认知。光的这些影响被称为光的非视觉效应,主要是在实验室环境中进行研究的,在实验室环境中可以仔细控制光的强度、光谱和时间,以得出与相关生理结果之间的联系。最近,随着可穿戴式光记录仪的日益普及,人们有可能在自由生活条件下研究个人的光照射情况,即人们从事日常生活活动的情况,从而得出光照射与健康结果相关联的研究结果,支持在适当时间进行充足的光照射对人体健康的重要性。然而,目前还缺乏全面的方案来捕捉导致测量光照射的环境因素(如地理位置、季节、气候、光周期)和个人因素(如文化、个人习惯、行为、通勤类型、职业)。在此,我们介绍一种将基于智能手机的体验采样(ESM,实施卡罗林斯卡嗜睡量表(KSS)评级)和在三个身体部位(安装在眼镜上的两眼之间的近角膜平面、颈部佩戴的吊坠/胸牌和手腕佩戴的手表式设计)收集高质量光照数据相结合的方案,以捕捉与个人光照相关的日常因素。我们将在一项国际多中心研究中实施该方案,在德国、荷兰、西班牙、瑞典和土耳其调查影响光照模式的环境和社会文化因素(每个地点最少 n=15,目标 n=30;所有地点最少 n=75,目标 n=150)。通过由此产生的数据集,将确定有助于健康光照的生活方式和特定环境因素。这些信息对于设计有效的公共卫生干预措施至关重要。
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