4.7 Article

The public health impact of poor sleep on severe COVID-19 ,influenza and upper respiratory infections

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EBIOMEDICINE
卷 93, 期 -, 页码 -

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ebiom.2023.104630

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Insomnia; COVID-19; Respiratory infections; Mendelian randomization; Sleep; Severe infection

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This study finds that poor sleep quality is one of the causes of respiratory infections. Using data analysis and Mendelian randomization methods, the study discovered a causal relationship between insomnia and influenza, upper respiratory infections (URIs), COVID-19 infection, and the risk of hospitalization from COVID-19.
Background Poor sleep is associated with an increased risk of infections and all-cause mortality but the causal direction between poor sleep and respiratory infections has remained unclear. We examined if poor sleep contributes as a causal risk factor to respiratory infections.Methods We used data on insomnia, influenza and upper respiratory infections (URIs) from primary care and hospital records in the UK Biobank (N 231,000) and FinnGen (N 392,000). We computed logistic regression to assess association between poor sleep and infections, disease free survival hazard ratios, and performed Mendelian randomization analyses to assess causality.Findings Utilizing 23 years of registry data and follow-up, we discovered that insomnia diagnosis associated with increased risk for infections (FinnGen influenza Cox's proportional hazard (CPH) HR = 4.34 [3.90, 4.83], P = 4.16 x 10-159, UK Biobank influenza CPH HR = 1.54 [1.37, 1.73], P = 2.49 x 10-13). Mendelian randomization indicated that insomnia causally predisposed to influenza (inverse-variance weighted (IVW) OR = 1.65, P = 5.86 x 10-7), URI (IVW OR = 1.94, P = 8.14 x 10-31), COVID-19 infection (IVW OR = 1.08, P = 0.037) and risk of hospitalization from COVID-19 (IVW OR = 1.47, P = 4.96 x 10-5).Interpretation Our findings indicate that chronic poor sleep is a causal risk factor for contracting respiratory in-fections, and in addition contributes to the severity of respiratory infections. These findings highlight the role of sleep in maintaining sufficient immune response against pathogens.Funding Instrumentarium Science Foundation, Academy of Finland, Signe and Ane Gyllenberg Foundation, National Institutes of Health.Copyright & COPY; 2023 Published by Elsevier B.V. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http:// creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

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