4.7 Article

Trajectories of Insomnia Symptoms From Childhood Through Young Adulthood

Journal

PEDIATRICS
Volume 149, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

AMER ACAD PEDIATRICS
DOI: 10.1542/peds.2021-053616

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Funding

  1. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, National Institute of Mental Health
  2. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences of the National Institutes of Health [R01HL136587, R01MH118308, R01HL097165, R01HL063772, UL1TR000127]

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This study examines the developmental trajectories of insomnia symptoms in childhood, their evolution into adult insomnia, and the role of objective sleep duration in this transition. The study finds that a high proportion of children with insomnia symptoms experience persistent symptoms into adulthood, and short sleep duration in childhood and adolescence increases the likelihood of worsening into adult insomnia. Early sleep interventions are crucial, and objective sleep measures may be clinically useful during adolescence.
OBJECTIVES: Insomnia symptoms are transdiagnostic to physical and mental health disorders. Given the lack of population-based cohorts with objective sleep measures and long-term follow-ups, little is known about the chronicity of childhood insomnia symptoms. We determined the developmental trajectories of insomnia symptoms, their evolution into adult insomnia, and the role of objective sleep duration in the transition to adulthood. METHODS: A total of 502 children (median 9 years old, 71.7% response rate) were studied 7.4 years later as adolescents (median 16 years old) and 15 years later as adults (median 24 years old). Insomnia symptoms were ascertained as moderate-to-severe difficulties initiating and/or maintaining sleep via parent- or self reports at all 3 time points, adult insomnia via self-report in young adulthood, and objective short-sleep duration via polysomnography in childhood and adolescence. RESULTS: Among children with insomnia symptoms, the most frequent trajectory was persistence (43.3%), followed by remission (26.9% since childhood, 11.2% since adolescence) and a waxing-and-waning pattern (18.6%). Among children with normal sleep, the most frequent trajectory was persistence (48.1%), followed by developing insomnia symptoms (15.2% since adolescence, 20.7% in adulthood) and a waxing-and-waning pattern (16.0%). The odds of insomnia symptoms worsening into adult insomnia (22.0% of children, 20.8% of adolescents) were 2.6-fold and 5.5-fold among short-sleeping children and adolescents, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: Early sleep interventions are a health priority because pediatricians should not expect insomnia symptoms to developmentally remit in a high proportion of children. Objective sleep measures may be clinically useful in adolescence, a critical period for the adverse prognosis of the insomnia with short-sleep duration phenotype.

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