Sleep duration and total and cause-specific mortality in a large US cohort: interrelationships with physical activity, sedentary behavior, and body mass index.

Both short and long durations of sleep are associated with higher mortality, but little is known about the interrelationship between sleep and other modifiable factors in relation to mortality. In the National Institutes of Health-AARP Diet and Health Study (1995-1996), we examined associations between sleep duration and total, cardiovascular disease (CVD), and cancer mortality among 239,896 US men and women aged 51-72 years who were free of cancer, CVD, and respiratory disease. We evaluated the influence of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity, television viewing, and body mass index (BMI; weight (kg)/height (m)(2)) on the sleep-mortality association and assessed their combined association with mortality. During an average of 14 years of follow-up, we identified 44,100 deaths. Compared with 7-8 hours of sleep per day, both shorter and longer sleep durations were associated with higher total and CVD mortality. We found a greater elevation in CVD mortality associated with shorter sleep among overweight and obese people, suggesting a synergistic interaction between sleep and BMI. People in the unhealthy categories of all 4 risk factors (sleep <7 hours/day, moderate-to-vigorous physical activity ≤1 hour/week, television viewing ≥3 hours/day, and BMI ≥25) had significantly higher all-cause (relative risk (RR) = 1.42, 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.34, 1.52), CVD (RR = 1.90, 95% CI: 1.67, 2.17), and cancer (RR = 1.21, 95% CI: 1.09, 1.34) mortality. Short sleep duration may predict higher mortality, particularly CVD mortality, among overweight and obese people.

[1]  Association of a , 1955 .

[2]  S Lemeshow,et al.  Confidence interval estimation of interaction. , 1992, Epidemiology.

[3]  A F Subar,et al.  Design and serendipity in establishing a large cohort with wide dietary intake distributions : the National Institutes of Health-American Association of Retired Persons Diet and Health Study. , 2001, American journal of epidemiology.

[4]  David P White,et al.  A prospective study of sleep duration and mortality risk in women. , 2004, Sleep.

[5]  K. Kayaba,et al.  Sleep Duration and Mortality in Japan: the Jichi Medical School Cohort Study , 2004, Journal of epidemiology.

[6]  T. Young,et al.  Excess weight and sleep-disordered breathing. , 2005, Journal of applied physiology.

[7]  F. Hu,et al.  Correlates of long sleep duration. , 2006, Sleep.

[8]  M. Aloia,et al.  Cross-sectional relationship of reported fatigue to obesity, diet, and physical activity: results from the third national health and nutrition examination survey. , 2006, Journal of clinical sleep medicine : JCSM : official publication of the American Academy of Sleep Medicine.

[9]  E. van Cauter,et al.  The metabolic consequences of sleep deprivation. , 2007, Sleep medicine reviews.

[10]  Yu-Hsuan Lin,et al.  Nighttime sleep, Chinese afternoon nap, and mortality in the elderly. , 2007, Sleep.

[11]  S. Drummond,et al.  Who are the long sleepers? Towards an understanding of the mortality relationship. , 2007, Sleep medicine reviews.

[12]  G. F. do Prado,et al.  Physically active elderly women sleep more and better than sedentary women. , 2008, Sleep medicine.

[13]  E. van Cauter,et al.  Sleep and the epidemic of obesity in children and adults , 2008, European journal of endocrinology.

[14]  M. Marmot,et al.  Correlates of short and long sleep duration: a cross-cultural comparison between the United Kingdom and the United States: the Whitehall II Study and the Western New York Health Study. , 2008, American journal of epidemiology.

[15]  Sanjay R. Patel,et al.  Short Sleep Duration and Weight Gain: A Systematic Review , 2008, Obesity.

[16]  L. Gallicchio,et al.  Sleep duration and mortality: a systematic review and meta‐analysis , 2009, Journal of sleep research.

[17]  Sigurd W. Hermansen,et al.  The impact on National Death Index ascertainment of limiting submissions to Social Security Administration Death Master File matches in epidemiologic studies of mortality. , 2009, American journal of epidemiology.

[18]  A. Tamakoshi,et al.  Association of sleep duration with mortality from cardiovascular disease and other causes for Japanese men and women: the JACC study. , 2009, Sleep.

[19]  David B Richardson,et al.  American Journal of Epidemiology Practice of Epidemiology Estimation of the Relative Excess Risk Due to Interaction and Associated Confidence Bounds , 2022 .

[20]  F. Cappuccio,et al.  Sleep duration and all-cause mortality: a systematic review and meta-analysis of prospective studies. , 2010, Sleep.

[21]  Lauren Hale,et al.  Mortality associated with short sleep duration: The evidence, the possible mechanisms, and the future. , 2010, Sleep medicine reviews.

[22]  C. Magee,et al.  Examining the Pathways Linking Chronic Sleep Restriction to Obesity , 2010, Journal of obesity.

[23]  Matthias Egger,et al.  Domains of physical activity and all-cause mortality: systematic review and dose-response meta-analysis of cohort studies. , 2011, International journal of epidemiology.

[24]  Pasquale Strazzullo,et al.  Sleep duration predicts cardiovascular outcomes: a systematic review and meta-analysis of prospective studies. , 2011, European heart journal.

[25]  R. Shephard Body-Mass Index and Mortality among 1.46 Million White Adults , 2011 .

[26]  Risto Sippola,et al.  Self-reported sleep duration, all-cause mortality, cardiovascular mortality and morbidity in Finland. , 2011, Sleep medicine.

[27]  Unhealthy sleep-related behaviors--12 States, 2009. , 2011, MMWR. Morbidity and mortality weekly report.

[28]  Katherine M Flegal,et al.  Prevalence of obesity and trends in the distribution of body mass index among US adults, 1999-2010. , 2012, JAMA.

[29]  Yikyung Park,et al.  Amount of time spent in sedentary behaviors and cause-specific mortality in US adults. , 2012, The American journal of clinical nutrition.

[30]  X. Shu,et al.  Sleep duration and its correlates in middle-aged and elderly Chinese women: the Shanghai Women's Health Study. , 2012, Sleep medicine.

[31]  C. Matthews,et al.  A large prospective investigation of sleep duration, weight change, and obesity in the NIH-AARP Diet and Health Study cohort. , 2013, American journal of epidemiology.

[32]  C. Magee,et al.  Investigation of the relationship between sleep duration, all-cause mortality, and preexisting disease. , 2013, Sleep medicine.

[33]  Jen-Hao Chen,et al.  Sleep duration and all-cause mortality: a critical review of measurement and associations. , 2013, Annals of epidemiology.

[34]  T. Åkerstedt,et al.  Original Contribution Sleep Duration and Survival Percentiles across Categories of Physical Activity , 2022 .