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Risk of COPD exacerbation is increased by poor sleep quality and modified by social adversity.

Authors :
Baugh, Aaron
Baugh, Aaron
Buhr, Russell G
Quibrera, Pedro
Barjaktarevic, Igor
Barr, R Graham
Bowler, Russell
Han, Meilan King
Kaufman, Joel D
Koch, Abigail L
Krishnan, Jerry
Labaki, Wassim
Martinez, Fernando J
Mkorombindo, Takudzwa
Namen, Andrew
Ortega, Victor
Paine, Robert
Peters, Stephen P
Schotland, Helena
Sundar, Krishna
Zeidler, Michelle R
Hansel, Nadia N
Woodruff, Prescott G
Thakur, Neeta
Baugh, Aaron
Baugh, Aaron
Buhr, Russell G
Quibrera, Pedro
Barjaktarevic, Igor
Barr, R Graham
Bowler, Russell
Han, Meilan King
Kaufman, Joel D
Koch, Abigail L
Krishnan, Jerry
Labaki, Wassim
Martinez, Fernando J
Mkorombindo, Takudzwa
Namen, Andrew
Ortega, Victor
Paine, Robert
Peters, Stephen P
Schotland, Helena
Sundar, Krishna
Zeidler, Michelle R
Hansel, Nadia N
Woodruff, Prescott G
Thakur, Neeta
Source :
Sleep; vol 45, iss 8, zsac107; 0161-8105
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Study objectivesSleep is an important dimension in the care of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), but its relevance to exacerbations is unclear. We wanted to assess whether sleep quality as measured by the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) is associated with an increased risk of COPD exacerbations and does this differ by socio-environmental exposures.MethodsWe included 1647 current and former smokers with spirometrically confirmed COPD from the SPIROMICS cohort. We assessed incidence rate ratios for exacerbation using zero-inflated negative binomial regression adjusting for demographics, medical comorbidities, and multiple metrics of disease severity, including respiratory medications, airflow obstruction, and symptom burden. Our final model adjusted for socio-environmental exposures using the Area Deprivation Index, a composite measure of contemporary neighborhood quality, and Adversity-Opportunity Index, a composite measure of individual-level historic and current socioeconomic indicators. We used a pre-determined threshold of 20% missingness to undertake multiple imputation by chained equations. As sensitivity analyses, we repeated models in those with complete data and after controlling for prior exacerbations. As an exploratory analysis, we considered an interaction between socio-environmental condition and sleep quality.ResultsAfter adjustment for all co-variates, increasing PSQI scores (range 0-21) were associated with a 5% increased risk for exacerbation per point (p = .001) in the imputed dataset. Sensitivity analyses using complete cases and after controlling for prior exacerbation history were similar. Exploratory analysis suggested less effect among those who lived in poor-quality neighborhoods (p-for-interaction = .035).ConclusionsPoor sleep quality may contribute to future exacerbations among patients with COPD. This represents one target for improving disease control.Clinical trial registrationSubpopulations and Intermediate Outcome Mea

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Sleep; vol 45, iss 8, zsac107; 0161-8105
Notes :
application/pdf, Sleep vol 45, iss 8, zsac107 0161-8105
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1391589081
Document Type :
Electronic Resource