Poor sleep quality, dementia status and their association with all-cause mortality among older US adults.

IF 3.9 3区 医学 Q2 CELL BIOLOGY
Aging-Us Pub Date : 2024-09-04 DOI:10.18632/aging.206102
May A Beydoun, Rio Tate, Michael F Georgescu, Alyssa A Gamaldo, Christian A Maino Vieytes, Hind A Beydoun, Nicole Noren Hooten, Michele K Evans, Alan B Zonderman
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Abstract

Background: Evidence points to associations between sleep quality, dementia, and mortality. We examined whether poor sleep quality mediated or moderated the association between dementia and mortality risk among older US adults and vice versa, and whether these associations differed by sex and by race.

Methods: The study investigated bi-directional associations between sleep quality, dementia and mortality in older US adults using data from the Health and Retirement Study (N = 6,991, mean age = 78.1y, follow-up: 2006-2020, number of deaths = 4,938). It tested interactions and mediating effects, using Cox proportional hazards models and four-way decomposition models.

Results: Poor sleep quality was associated with increased mortality risk, particularly among male and White older adults. However, the association was reversed in the fully adjusted model, with a 7% decrease in risk per tertile. Probable dementia was associated with a two-fold increase in mortality risk, with a stronger association found among White adults. The association was markedly attenuated in the fully adjusted models. Sleep quality-stratified models showed a stronger positive association between dementia and mortality among individuals with better sleep quality. Both mediation and interaction were involved in explaining the total effects under study, though statistically significant total effects were mainly composed of controlled direct effects.

Conclusions: Poor sleep quality is directly related to mortality risk before lifestyle and health-related factors are adjusted. Dementia is linked to mortality risk, especially in individuals with better sleep quality, males, and White older adults. Future research should explore the underlying mechanisms.

美国老年人睡眠质量差、痴呆状态及其与全因死亡率的关系。
背景:有证据表明,睡眠质量、痴呆症和死亡率之间存在关联。我们研究了睡眠质量差是否对美国老年人痴呆症和死亡风险之间的关联起中介或调节作用,反之亦然,以及这些关联是否因性别和种族而异:该研究利用《健康与退休研究》(Health and Retirement Study)的数据调查了美国老年人睡眠质量、痴呆症和死亡率之间的双向关系(样本数=6991,平均年龄=78.1岁,随访时间:2006-2020年,死亡人数=4938)。研究使用考克斯比例危险模型和四向分解模型对交互作用和中介效应进行了检验:结果:睡眠质量差与死亡风险增加有关,尤其是男性和白人老年人。然而,在完全调整模型中,这种关联发生了逆转,每三级风险降低了 7%。可能的痴呆症与死亡风险增加两倍有关,在白种人中的关联性更强。这种关联在完全调整模型中明显减弱。睡眠质量分层模型显示,在睡眠质量较好的人群中,痴呆症与死亡率之间的正相关性更强。中介效应和交互效应均可解释研究中的总效应,但具有统计学意义的总效应主要由受控制的直接效应构成:结论:在调整生活方式和健康相关因素之前,睡眠质量差与死亡风险直接相关。痴呆症与死亡风险有关,尤其是在睡眠质量较好的个体、男性和白人老年人中。未来的研究应探索其潜在机制。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Aging-Us
Aging-Us CELL BIOLOGY-
CiteScore
10.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
595
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Information not localized
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