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Sleep disturbance and quality of life in rheumatoid arthritis: prospective mHealth study

Sleep disturbance and quality of life in rheumatoid arthritis: prospective mHealth study
Sleep disturbance and quality of life in rheumatoid arthritis: prospective mHealth study
Background: sleep disturbances and poor health-related quality of life (HRQoL) are common in people with rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Sleep disturbances, such as less total sleep time, more waking periods after sleep onset, and higher levels of nonrestorative sleep, may be a driver of HRQoL. However, understanding whether these sleep disturbances reduce HRQoL has, to date, been challenging because of the need to collect complex time-varying data at high resolution. Such data collection is now made possible by the widespread availability and use of mobile health (mHealth) technologies.

Objective: this mHealth study aimed to test whether sleep disturbance (both absolute values and variability) causes poor HRQoL.

Methods: the quality of life, sleep, and RA study was a prospective mHealth study of adults with RA. Participants completed a baseline questionnaire, wore a triaxial accelerometer for 30 days to objectively assess sleep, and provided daily reports via a smartphone app that assessed sleep (Consensus Sleep Diary), pain, fatigue, mood, and other symptoms. Participants completed the World Health Organization Quality of Life-Brief (WHOQoL-BREF) questionnaire every 10 days. Multilevel modeling tested the relationship between sleep variables and the WHOQoL-BREF domains (physical, psychological, environmental, and social).

Results: of the 268 recruited participants, 254 were included in the analysis. Across all WHOQoL-BREF domains, participants’ scores were lower than the population average. Consensus Sleep Diary sleep parameters predicted the WHOQoL-BREF domain scores. For example, for each hour increase in the total time asleep physical domain scores increased by 1.11 points (β=1.11, 95% CI 0.07-2.15) and social domain scores increased by 1.65 points. These associations were not explained by sociodemographic and lifestyle factors, disease activity, medication use, anxiety levels, sleep quality, or clinical sleep disorders. However, these changes were attenuated and no longer significant when pain, fatigue, and mood were included in the model. Increased variability in total time asleep was associated with poorer physical and psychological domain scores, independent of all covariates. There was no association between actigraphy-measured sleep and WHOQoL-BREF.

Conclusions: optimizing total sleep time, increasing sleep efficiency, decreasing sleep onset latency, and reducing variability in total sleep time could improve HRQoL in people with RA.
fatigue, health-related quality of life, HRQoL, mobile health, mobile phone, mood, pain, QoL, quality of life, rheumatoid arthritis, sleep, sleep disturbance, sleep efficiency, WHOQoL-BREF
1438-8871
McBeth, John
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Dixon, William G.
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Moore, Susan Mary
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Hellman, Bruce
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James, Ben
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Kyle, Simon D.
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Lunt, Mark
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Cordingley, Lis
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Yimer, Belay Birlie
35af844b-99da-44ae-959a-edfe713eb3c3
Druce, Katie L.
02f51c2c-e166-4a3a-a059-34f4629652f1
McBeth, John
98012716-66ba-480b-9e43-ac53b51dce61
Dixon, William G.
8fcb2256-4094-4f58-9777-4248ad245166
Moore, Susan Mary
5a010772-3f3f-4ae4-a545-e59805a1eebd
Hellman, Bruce
7ec8ca35-8c4f-4607-98e3-de47c9665230
James, Ben
5bba1a9f-0277-4814-8f20-d6e8e46d333f
Kyle, Simon D.
a275227d-2085-4508-a6b4-f4876a1403f9
Lunt, Mark
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Cordingley, Lis
83da6442-d5d6-43fc-b950-59957900a4b5
Yimer, Belay Birlie
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Druce, Katie L.
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McBeth, John, Dixon, William G., Moore, Susan Mary, Hellman, Bruce, James, Ben, Kyle, Simon D., Lunt, Mark, Cordingley, Lis, Yimer, Belay Birlie and Druce, Katie L. (2022) Sleep disturbance and quality of life in rheumatoid arthritis: prospective mHealth study. Journal of Medical Internet Research, 24 (4), [e32825]. (doi:10.2196/preprints.32825).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: sleep disturbances and poor health-related quality of life (HRQoL) are common in people with rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Sleep disturbances, such as less total sleep time, more waking periods after sleep onset, and higher levels of nonrestorative sleep, may be a driver of HRQoL. However, understanding whether these sleep disturbances reduce HRQoL has, to date, been challenging because of the need to collect complex time-varying data at high resolution. Such data collection is now made possible by the widespread availability and use of mobile health (mHealth) technologies.

Objective: this mHealth study aimed to test whether sleep disturbance (both absolute values and variability) causes poor HRQoL.

Methods: the quality of life, sleep, and RA study was a prospective mHealth study of adults with RA. Participants completed a baseline questionnaire, wore a triaxial accelerometer for 30 days to objectively assess sleep, and provided daily reports via a smartphone app that assessed sleep (Consensus Sleep Diary), pain, fatigue, mood, and other symptoms. Participants completed the World Health Organization Quality of Life-Brief (WHOQoL-BREF) questionnaire every 10 days. Multilevel modeling tested the relationship between sleep variables and the WHOQoL-BREF domains (physical, psychological, environmental, and social).

Results: of the 268 recruited participants, 254 were included in the analysis. Across all WHOQoL-BREF domains, participants’ scores were lower than the population average. Consensus Sleep Diary sleep parameters predicted the WHOQoL-BREF domain scores. For example, for each hour increase in the total time asleep physical domain scores increased by 1.11 points (β=1.11, 95% CI 0.07-2.15) and social domain scores increased by 1.65 points. These associations were not explained by sociodemographic and lifestyle factors, disease activity, medication use, anxiety levels, sleep quality, or clinical sleep disorders. However, these changes were attenuated and no longer significant when pain, fatigue, and mood were included in the model. Increased variability in total time asleep was associated with poorer physical and psychological domain scores, independent of all covariates. There was no association between actigraphy-measured sleep and WHOQoL-BREF.

Conclusions: optimizing total sleep time, increasing sleep efficiency, decreasing sleep onset latency, and reducing variability in total sleep time could improve HRQoL in people with RA.

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Accepted/In Press date: 27 December 2021
Published date: 22 April 2022
Keywords: fatigue, health-related quality of life, HRQoL, mobile health, mobile phone, mood, pain, QoL, quality of life, rheumatoid arthritis, sleep, sleep disturbance, sleep efficiency, WHOQoL-BREF

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 491546
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/491546
ISSN: 1438-8871
PURE UUID: fa9b729e-af84-4b2e-bf7a-8312c13e553c
ORCID for John McBeth: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7047-2183

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Date deposited: 25 Jun 2024 17:16
Last modified: 12 Jul 2024 02:17

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Contributors

Author: John McBeth ORCID iD
Author: William G. Dixon
Author: Susan Mary Moore
Author: Bruce Hellman
Author: Ben James
Author: Simon D. Kyle
Author: Mark Lunt
Author: Lis Cordingley
Author: Belay Birlie Yimer
Author: Katie L. Druce

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