The Effect of Habitual Sleep Duration on Weight Loss during a Behavioral Weight Loss Intervention in a Mediterranean Population.

IF 3.8 3区 医学 Q2 NUTRITION & DIETETICS
María Rodríguez-Martín, Lukasz Szczerbinski, Marta Garaulet, Hassan S Dashti
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Abstract

Background: Sleep duration affects metabolic health and appetite regulation, but its role in behavioral weight loss interventions remains unclear as prior studies are limited by small sample sizes, cross-sectional designs, and inconsistent findings.

Objectives: This study aims to examine the associations between nighttime sleep duration and weight loss in a behavioral intervention among adults with overweight or obesity in Spain.

Methods: This secondary analysis included adults with overweight or obesity from the Obesity, Nutrigenetics, Timing, and Mediterranean study, a 25-wk behavioral weight loss intervention. Participants self-reported sleep duration at enrollment and were categorized as short (<7 h), recommended (7-8 h), or long (>8 h) sleepers. Outcomes included percentage weight loss, clinically meaningful weight loss (≥5%), rate of weight loss (≥0.53 kg/wk), and attrition. Associations were examined using logistic regression and linear mixed-effects models adjusted for age, sex, baseline weight, intervention duration, and clinic site.

Results: Among 3628 participants (mean age 41.2 ± 14.1 y; 77.6% women), 23.7% reported sleeping >8 h, 60.9% reported sleeping 7-8 h, and 15.4% reported sleeping <7 h per night. Long sleepers had significantly lower average weight loss (7.42%) compared with recommended sleepers (7.90%, P = 0.015). Long sleep was associated with 21% lower odds of achieving ≥5% weight loss [odds ratio (OR): 0.79; 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.66, 0.96], 25% lower odds of rapid weight loss (OR: 0.75; 95% CI: 0.63, 0.89), and 21% higher odds of attrition (OR: 1.21; 95% CI: 1.03, 1.43) compared with recommended (7-8 h) sleep. No significant associations were observed for short sleepers. Linear mixed-effects models further indicated lower weight loss among long sleepers [β: 0.099; standard error (SE): 0.040; P = 0.015], with no significant difference for short sleepers (β: -0.031; SE: 0.048; P = 0.514).

Conclusions: Habitual long sleep duration is associated with reduced weight loss success and increased risk of attrition in a behavioral weight loss intervention. This trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT02829619.

在地中海人群的行为减肥干预中,习惯性睡眠时间对体重减轻的影响。
背景:睡眠时间影响代谢健康和食欲调节,但其在行为减肥干预中的作用尚不清楚,因为先前的研究受样本量小、横截面设计和结果不一致的限制。目的:在西班牙超重或肥胖成人的行为干预中,研究夜间睡眠时间与体重减轻之间的关系。方法:这项二级分析包括来自ONTIME研究的超重或肥胖成年人,这是一项为期25周的行为减肥干预。参与者在登记时自我报告睡眠时间,并被归类为短睡眠者(8小时)。结果包括体重减轻百分比、临床意义的体重减轻(≥5%)、体重减轻率(≥0.53kg/周)和减量。使用逻辑回归和线性混合效应模型对年龄、性别、基线体重、干预持续时间和诊所地点进行校正。结果:在3628名参与者中(平均年龄41.2±14.1岁,77.6%为女性),23.7%的人报告睡眠时间为80小时,60.9%的人报告睡眠时间为7-8小时,15.4%的人报告睡眠时间。结论:在行为减肥干预中,习惯性长时间睡眠与减肥成功率降低和消耗风险增加有关。临床试验注册号及获取网站:ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT02829619 (https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT02829619)。
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
Journal of Nutrition
Journal of Nutrition 医学-营养学
CiteScore
7.60
自引率
4.80%
发文量
260
审稿时长
39 days
期刊介绍: The Journal of Nutrition (JN/J Nutr) publishes peer-reviewed original research papers covering all aspects of experimental nutrition in humans and other animal species; special articles such as reviews and biographies of prominent nutrition scientists; and issues, opinions, and commentaries on controversial issues in nutrition. Supplements are frequently published to provide extended discussion of topics of special interest.
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