Dana Saleh, Suzanne M Bertisch, Michelle Reid, Andrew Lim, Shaun Purcell, Susan Redline
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Study objectives: Wake after sleep onset and sleep efficiency derived from actigraphy are common assessments of sleep fragmentation (or continuity). The sleep fragmentation index (SFI), measuring the frequency of sleep-wake transitions, is less understood. This study examined (1) the convergent validity between SFI and other sleep metrics obtained by actigraphy and polysomnography; and (2) associations of SFI with sleep symptoms, obstructive sleep apnea, periodic limb movement index, and cognition (Digit Symbol Coding test).
Methods: Cross-sectional analysis using logistic and multiple regression analyses adjusted for potential confounders. 1,908 participants in the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis study who underwent 7-day actigraphy and polysomnography. The sample was 53.9% female; age 68.3 ± 9.1 years (mean ± standard deviation); apnea-hypopnea index 19.5 ± 17 events/h; and SFI 20.09 ± 6.99.
Results: Higher SFI was associated with older age, male sex, Black race, smoking, body mass index, obstructive sleep apnea, and polysomnography-based metrics of sleep architecture. SFI was strongly correlated with actigraphy-measured sleep efficiency (r = -.75; P < .0001) and wake after sleep onset (r = .63; P < .0001), and modestly correlated with polysomnography-wake after sleep onset, apnea-hypopnea index, and arousal index (rs = 0.23-0.27; Ps < .0001). In adjusted analyses, each standard deviation unit increase in SFI was associated with 1.1-1.4 higher odds of insomnia symptoms, sleepiness, obstructive sleep apnea, an elevated periodic limb movement index, and with lower Digit Symbol Coding test scores (P < .05).
Conclusions: The results support the convergent validity between actigraphy-estimated SFI and actigraphy-wake after sleep onset and sleep efficiency. SFI showed modestly stronger associations with clinical symptoms compared to other fragmentation variables, supporting its utility as a marker of sleep continuity.
Citation: Saleh D, Bertisch SM, Reid M, Lim A, Purcell S, Redline S. Actigraphy-derived sleep fragmentation index: convergent validity and associations with clinical outcomes. J Clin Sleep Med. 2025;21(9):1557-1565.
期刊介绍:
Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine focuses on clinical sleep medicine. Its emphasis is publication of papers with direct applicability and/or relevance to the clinical practice of sleep medicine. This includes clinical trials, clinical reviews, clinical commentary and debate, medical economic/practice perspectives, case series and novel/interesting case reports. In addition, the journal will publish proceedings from conferences, workshops and symposia sponsored by the American Academy of Sleep Medicine or other organizations related to improving the practice of sleep medicine.