4.3 Article

Age Trends in Actigraphy and Self-Report Sleep Across the Life Span: Findings From the Pittsburgh Lifespan Sleep Databank

Journal

PSYCHOSOMATIC MEDICINE
Volume 84, Issue 4, Pages 410-420

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/PSY.0000000000001060

Keywords

life span; sleep; actigraphy; GAM = generalized additive model; PLSD = Pittsburgh Lifespan Sleep Databank; PSQI = Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index

Funding

  1. University of Pittsburgh Clinical and Translational Science Institute [UL1TR001857]
  2. National Institute on Aging [AG047139, AG20677]
  3. National Institute of Mental Health [MH102412, MH077106]
  4. National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute [HL093220, HL112646, HL104607, HL076379]
  5. National Institute on Drug Abuse [DA033064]
  6. National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism [AA023209]
  7. Department of Defense [log11293006]
  8. Pittsburgh Foundation
  9. Jacobs Foundation
  10. UPP Foundation
  11. Crohn's and Colitis Foundation of America [CCFA277020]
  12. Sleep Research Society [013-JP-16]

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This study used individual-level cross-sectional data to characterize age trends and sex differences in sleep dimensions across the healthy human life span. It found that sleep onset time and duration varied across different age groups, with differences between sexes also noted.
Objective Sleep changes over the human life span, and it does so across multiple dimensions. We used individual-level cross-sectional data to characterize age trends and sex differences in actigraphy and self-report sleep dimensions across the healthy human life span. Methods The Pittsburgh Lifespan Sleep Databank consists of harmonized participant-level data from sleep-related studies conducted at the University of Pittsburgh (2003-2019). We included data from 1065 (n = 577 female; 21 studies) Pittsburgh Lifespan Sleep Databank participants aged 10 to 87 years without a major psychiatric, sleep, or medical condition. All participants completed wrist actigraphy and the self-rated Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index. Main outcomes included actigraphy and self-report sleep duration, efficiency, and onset/offset timing, and actigraphy variability in midsleep timing. Results We used generalized additive models to examine potentially nonlinear relationships between age and sleep characteristics and to examine sex differences. Actigraphy and self-report sleep onset time shifted later between ages 10 and 18 years (23:03-24:10 [actigraphy]; 21:58-23:53 [self-report]) and then earlier during the 20s (00:08-23:40 [actigraphy]; 23:50-23:34 [self-report]). Actigraphy and self-report wake-up time also shifted earlier during the mid-20s through late 30s (07:48-06:52 [actigraphy]; 07:40-06:41 [self-report]). Self-report, but not actigraphy, sleep duration declined between ages 10 and 20 years (09:09-07:35). Self-report sleep efficiency decreased over the entire life span (96.12-93.28), as did actigraphy variability (01:54-01:31). Conclusions Awareness of age trends in multiple sleep dimensions in healthy individuals-and explicating the timing and nature of sex differences in age-related change-can suggest periods of sleep-related risk or resilience and guide intervention efforts.

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