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Self-reported and objective sleep duration in patients with CKD: are they telling the same story?

Abstract

Introduction:

There is disagreement between data on sleep duration obtained from questionnaires and objective measurements. Whether this is also true for individuals with CKD is unknown. Here we compared self-reported sleep duration with sleep duration obtained by actigraphy.

Methods:

This prospective study included adult individuals with stage 3 CKD recruited between September/2016 and February/2019. We evaluated subjective sleep duration by asking the following question: “How many hours of actual sleep did you get at night?”

Results:

Patients (N=34) were relatively young (51 ± 13 years). Self-reported and measured sleep duration were 7.1 ± 1.7 and 6.9 ± 1.6 hours, respectively, with no correlation between them (p=0.165). Although the mean difference between measurements was 0.21 h, the limits of agreement ranged from -3.7 to 4.1 h.

Conclusion:

Patients with CKD who are not on dialysis have an erroneous sleep perception. Data on sleep duration should be preferentially obtained from objective measurements in patients with CKD.

Keywords:
Actigraphy; Renal Insufficiency; Chronic; Conservative Treatment

Resumo

Introdução:

Há discordância entre os dados sobre duração do sono obtidos a partir de questionários e medições objetivas. Não se sabe se isto também é verdade para indivíduos com DRC. Aqui comparamos a duração do sono autorrelatada com a duração do sono obtida por meio de actigrafia.

Métodos:

Este estudo prospectivo incluiu indivíduos adultos com DRC estadio 3 recrutados entre Setembro/2016 e Fevereiro/2019. Avaliamos a duração subjetiva do sono, fazendo a seguinte questão: “Quantas horas de sono real você teve à noite?”

Resultados:

Os pacientes (N=34) eram relativamente jovens (51 ± 13 anos). A duração do sono autorrelatada e mensurada foi de 7,1 ± 1,7 e 6,9 ± 1,6 horas, respectivamente, sem correlação entre elas (p=0,165). Embora a diferença média entre as medições tenha sido de 0,21 h, os limites de concordância variaram de -3,7 a 4,1 h.

Conclusão:

Pacientes com DRC que não estão em diálise apresentam uma percepção equivocada do sono. Dados sobre a duração do sono devem ser obtidos preferencialmente a partir de medições objetivas em pacientes com DRC.

Descritores:
Actigrafia; Insuficiência Renal Crônica; Tratamento Conservador

Introduction

Sleep duration is a fundamental concept in epidemiological studies since total sleep time has important effects on health. Observational studies have produced discrepant results on the relationship between sleep duration and several outcomes. Short subjective sleep duration has been associated with hypertension, proteinuria, and higher risk of death in population-based studies11 Guimaraes KC, Silva CM, Latorraca COC, Oliveira RA, Crispim CA. Is self-reported short sleep duration associated with obesity? A systematic review and meta-analysis of cohort studies. Nutr Rev. 2021 Apr;80(5):983-1000.. For the general population, subjective sleep duration is already known to be inconsistent with objective measures obtained by actigraphy or polysomnography22 Schokman A, Bin YS, Simonelli G, Pye J, Morris R, Sumathipala A, et al. Agreement between subjective and objective measures of sleep duration in a low-middle income country setting. Sleep Health. 2018 Dec;4(6):543-50.. Whether this is also true for individuals with CKD is unknown.

Recently, Lee et al.33 Lee HJ, Kwak N, Kim YC, Choi SM, Lee J, Park YS, et al. Impact of sleep duration on mortality and quality of life in chronic kidney disease: results from the 2007-2015 KNHANES. Am J Nephrol. 2021;52(5):396-403. examined the relationship between sleep duration and mortality and quality of life in individuals with CKD. In the mentioned study, sleep duration was obtained by asking a question “How many hours a day do you usually sleep?”. The authors concluded that long sleep duration was associated with poor quality of life in Korean adults with CKD. As in the general population, data on average sleep duration in CKD patients are usually obtained from questionnaires33 Lee HJ, Kwak N, Kim YC, Choi SM, Lee J, Park YS, et al. Impact of sleep duration on mortality and quality of life in chronic kidney disease: results from the 2007-2015 KNHANES. Am J Nephrol. 2021;52(5):396-403.

4 Park S, Lee S, Kim Y, Lee Y, Kang MW, Kim K, et al. Short or long sleep duration and CKD: a mendelian randomization study. J Am Soc Nephrol. 2020 Dec;31(12):2937-47.

5 Petrov ME, Buman MP, Unruh ML, Baldwin CM, Jeong M, Reynaga-Ornelas L, et al. Association of sleep duration with kidney function and albuminuria: NHANES 2009-2012. Sleep Health. 2016 Mar;2(1):75-81.
-66 Ricardo AC, Goh V, Chen J, Cedillo-Couvert E, Kapella M, Prasad B, et al. Association of Sleep duration, symptoms, and disorders with mortality in adults with chronic kidney disease. Kidney Int Rep. 2017 Sep;2(5):866-73.. Few studies have measured sleep duration using actigraphy or a full-night registration77 Jackson CL, Umesi C, Gaston SA, Azarbarzin A, Lunyera J, McGrath JA, et al. Multiple, objectively measured sleep dimensions including hypoxic burden and chronic kidney disease: findings from the multi-ethnic study of atherosclerosis. Thorax. 2021 Jul;76(7):704-13.,88 Elias RM, Chan CT, Bradley TD. Altered sleep structure in patients with end-stage renal disease. Sleep Med. 2016 Apr;20:67-71.. In addition, these studies did not compare self-reported and objective measurements of sleep duration. Whether patients with CKD misestimate their sleep duration is unknown.

We evaluated the agreement between measured and self-reported sleep duration in patients with CKD on conservative treatment. We hypothesized that there is no agreement between subjective and objective measurements (actigraphy) of total sleep time.

Methods

Adult individuals attending the nephrology service at Hospital das Clinicas of Universidade de Sao Paulo were recruited between September/2016 and February/2019. Patients participated in a primary study on the association between sleep disorders and bone biomarkers. Eligibility criteria included an estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) indicating stage 3 CKD, according to the CKD-EPI equation99 Levey AS, Stevens LA, Schmid CH, Zhang YL, Castro AF, Feldman HI, et al. A new equation to estimate glomerular filtration rate. Ann Intern Med. 2009 May;150(9):604-12., and ability to give informed consent. Exclusion criteria were previous use of bisphosphonate, steroid, calcium carbonate, or anticonvulsants drugs, patients with polycystic kidney disease, hormone therapy, bedridden or wheelchair-dependent, and body mass index > 35 kg/m2. The local Research Ethics Board has approved the protocol (CAPpesq #46565615.5.0000.0068) and written consent was obtained from all patients.

Participants were instructed to wear the Actiwatch on the nondominant wrist for a period of 7 consecutive days and nights during a typical week. During actigraphy, participants kept a sleep diary. Subjects were instructed to press the event-marker button on the device to mark events such as time in and out of bed. The wrist Actiwach recorded data in 30-s epochs, and data were downloaded to a computer. An algorithm was used to calculate sleep duration, as the total time of epochs classified as sleep between bedtime and rising time. The parameter of interest was total sleep time (TST), which is the sum, in minutes, of all sleep epochs between sleep onset and sleep end. We evaluated subjective sleep duration by asking the following question: “How many hours of actual sleep did you get at night?” The wrist actigraphy has been validated against polysomnography, demonstrating a correlation of more than 0.9 for total sleep duration in healthy subjects, and is the instrument of choice for assessment of the sleep-wake cycle for prolonged periods of time1010 Morgenthaler T, Alessi C, Friedman L, Owens J, Kapur V, Boehlecke B, et al. Practice parameters for the use of actigraphy in the assessment of sleep and sleep disorders: an update for 2007. Sleep. 2007 Apr;30(4):519-29..

Data are presented as mean ± SD. We used Spearman coefficient to assess correlation between two variables. A Bland-Altman graph was built to test the agreement between reported and measured sleep duration. Difference of sleep duration between these two methods was plot against the mean for each subject. Analyses were performed using SPSS version 21.0 (SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL). A p value < 0.05 was considered to represent a statistically significant difference.

Results

Patients (N=34) were aged 51 ± 13 years and mostly non-white women. Almost half of the patients were considered overweight (47%). Self-reported sleep duration was 7.1 ± 1.7 hours, varying from 4 to 12 h, whereas measured sleep duration was 6.9 h, varying from 3.5 to 9.4 h. There was no correlation between reported and measured sleep duration (r=0.281, p=0.165), as shown in Figure 1A. The Bland-Altman plot (shown in Figure 1B) shows that although the mean difference between self-reported and measured sleep duration was 0.21 h, limits of agreement ranged from -3.7 to 4.1 h.

Figure 1
(A) Correlation between self-reported and sleep time measured by actigraphy. (B) Bland-Altman plot of sleep duration reported by patients and measured by actigraphy. Y axis shows the difference between reported and measured sleep duration and the X axis represents the average of these measures. Dotted lines represent -1 and +1 hour difference between measurements.

As shown in Table 1, using objective sleep duration as a reference, short sleepers (< 6 h) were misclassified in 90% of cases, normal sleep duration (6-8 h) in 28.6%, and long sleepers (> 8 h) in 80% of cases. In general, self-reported sleep duration was underestimated (Table 1). However, in patients reporting a total sleep time between 6-8 h, an equal number of patients slept more or less than the self-reported sleep duration.

Table 1
Comparison of self-reported and measured sleep duration according to 3 categories. Gray cells indicate agreement between methods

Discussion

We found no correlation between self-reported and measured sleep duration, supporting former studies with the general population. The discrepancy between subjective and objective sleep duration was so large that most patients were erroneously classified regarding sleep behavior.

In the general population, sleep duration has been associated with several outcomes. However, in the context of CKD, results are contradictory. While some authors have shown an increased risk of mortality and renal function decline associated with short sleep duration66 Ricardo AC, Goh V, Chen J, Cedillo-Couvert E, Kapella M, Prasad B, et al. Association of Sleep duration, symptoms, and disorders with mortality in adults with chronic kidney disease. Kidney Int Rep. 2017 Sep;2(5):866-73., others have shown an improvement of renal function55 Petrov ME, Buman MP, Unruh ML, Baldwin CM, Jeong M, Reynaga-Ornelas L, et al. Association of sleep duration with kidney function and albuminuria: NHANES 2009-2012. Sleep Health. 2016 Mar;2(1):75-81.. Yet, long sleep duration has also been associated with higher mortality33 Lee HJ, Kwak N, Kim YC, Choi SM, Lee J, Park YS, et al. Impact of sleep duration on mortality and quality of life in chronic kidney disease: results from the 2007-2015 KNHANES. Am J Nephrol. 2021;52(5):396-403. and renal function impairment44 Park S, Lee S, Kim Y, Lee Y, Kang MW, Kim K, et al. Short or long sleep duration and CKD: a mendelian randomization study. J Am Soc Nephrol. 2020 Dec;31(12):2937-47.,1111 Mazidi M, Shekoohi N, Katsiki N, Banach M. Longer sleep duration may negatively affect renal function. Int Urol Nephrol. 2021 Feb;53(2):325-32.. When evaluating CKD incidence, some studies found that a short sleep pattern is a protective factor1212 Nakajima H, Hashimoto Y, Okamura T, Obora A, Kojima T, Hamaguchi M, et al. Association between sleep duration and incident chronic kidney disease: a population-based cohort analysis of the NAGALA Study. Kidney Blood Press Res. 2020;45(2):339-49., whereas other authors have found a similar effect with sleep duration between 6 and 8 hours1313 Bo Y, Yeoh EK, Guo C, Zhang Z, Tam T, Chan TC, et al. Sleep and the risk of chronic kidney disease: a cohort study. J Clin Sleep Med. 2019 Mar;15(3):393-400.. Short and/or long sleep has been associated with higher CKD prevalence77 Jackson CL, Umesi C, Gaston SA, Azarbarzin A, Lunyera J, McGrath JA, et al. Multiple, objectively measured sleep dimensions including hypoxic burden and chronic kidney disease: findings from the multi-ethnic study of atherosclerosis. Thorax. 2021 Jul;76(7):704-13.,1414 Salifu I, Tedla F, Pandey A, Ayoub I, Brown C, McFarlane SI, et al. Sleep duration and chronic kidney disease: analysis of the national health interview survey. Cardiorenal Med. 2014 Dec;4(3-4):210-6.,1515 Yamamoto R, Shinzawa M, Isaka Y, Yamakoshi E, Imai E, Ohashi Y, et al. Sleep quality and sleep duration with CKD are associated with progression to ESKD. Clin J Am Soc Nephrol. 2018 Dec;13(12):1825-32., a result that has not been verified by others in a population with coronary artery disease1616 Furlan SF, Sinkunas V, Damiani LP, Santos RB, Peres M, Lemos PA, et al. Obstructive sleep apnea, sleep duration and chronic kidney disease in patients with coronary artery disease. Sleep Med. 2021 Aug;84:268-74.. In most studies in patients with CKD, sleep duration was obtained from questionnaires33 Lee HJ, Kwak N, Kim YC, Choi SM, Lee J, Park YS, et al. Impact of sleep duration on mortality and quality of life in chronic kidney disease: results from the 2007-2015 KNHANES. Am J Nephrol. 2021;52(5):396-403.

4 Park S, Lee S, Kim Y, Lee Y, Kang MW, Kim K, et al. Short or long sleep duration and CKD: a mendelian randomization study. J Am Soc Nephrol. 2020 Dec;31(12):2937-47.

5 Petrov ME, Buman MP, Unruh ML, Baldwin CM, Jeong M, Reynaga-Ornelas L, et al. Association of sleep duration with kidney function and albuminuria: NHANES 2009-2012. Sleep Health. 2016 Mar;2(1):75-81.
-66 Ricardo AC, Goh V, Chen J, Cedillo-Couvert E, Kapella M, Prasad B, et al. Association of Sleep duration, symptoms, and disorders with mortality in adults with chronic kidney disease. Kidney Int Rep. 2017 Sep;2(5):866-73.,1111 Mazidi M, Shekoohi N, Katsiki N, Banach M. Longer sleep duration may negatively affect renal function. Int Urol Nephrol. 2021 Feb;53(2):325-32.

12 Nakajima H, Hashimoto Y, Okamura T, Obora A, Kojima T, Hamaguchi M, et al. Association between sleep duration and incident chronic kidney disease: a population-based cohort analysis of the NAGALA Study. Kidney Blood Press Res. 2020;45(2):339-49.
-1313 Bo Y, Yeoh EK, Guo C, Zhang Z, Tam T, Chan TC, et al. Sleep and the risk of chronic kidney disease: a cohort study. J Clin Sleep Med. 2019 Mar;15(3):393-400.. Only a few studies measured sleep duration with actigraphy or a full-night registration77 Jackson CL, Umesi C, Gaston SA, Azarbarzin A, Lunyera J, McGrath JA, et al. Multiple, objectively measured sleep dimensions including hypoxic burden and chronic kidney disease: findings from the multi-ethnic study of atherosclerosis. Thorax. 2021 Jul;76(7):704-13.,1717 Petrov ME, Kim Y, Lauderdale DS, Lewis CE, Reis JP, Carnethon MR, et al. Objective sleep, a novel risk factor for alterations in kidney function: the CARDIA study. Sleep Med. 2014 Sep;15(9):1140-6.. In addition, these studies did not compare self-reported and measured sleep duration. The method by which sleep duration is obtained is crucial, particularly whether the data were subjectively obtained by questionnaires or objectively measured. If the disagreement between subjective and objective sleep duration is systematic, one can question previous results that have associated sleep duration to outcomes in patients with CKD.

There are several reasons explaining the discrepancies between objective and subjective measurements of sleep duration, namely: 1. Great variability between the methodology used for subjective (a single question, Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index questionnaire, other questionnaires) and objective sleep measurement (actigraphy, polysomnography); 2. Characteristics of the study population (healthy or with comorbidities, age, gender). There are also some discrepancies between objectively measured sleep and subjective sleep perception, which is reported mainly in patients with insomnia. However, it seems that this is also true for patients with sleep apnea1818 Nam H, Lim JS, Kim JS, Lee KJ, Koo DL, Lee C. Sleep perception in obstructive sleep apnea: a study using polysomnography and the multiple sleep latency test. J Clin Neurol. 2016 Apr;12(2):230-5.. Since half of our patients were overweight, there is a higher possibility of sleep breathing disorders contributing to the misperception of sleep duration.

In conclusion, patients with CKD not on dialysis misperceive sleep duration. The disagreement between self-reported and measured sleep duration argued for objectively obtained data in this population. Our findings suggest that the interpretation of data from previous studies should be carefully considered depending on how the sleep duration data were collected.

References

  • 1
    Guimaraes KC, Silva CM, Latorraca COC, Oliveira RA, Crispim CA. Is self-reported short sleep duration associated with obesity? A systematic review and meta-analysis of cohort studies. Nutr Rev. 2021 Apr;80(5):983-1000.
  • 2
    Schokman A, Bin YS, Simonelli G, Pye J, Morris R, Sumathipala A, et al. Agreement between subjective and objective measures of sleep duration in a low-middle income country setting. Sleep Health. 2018 Dec;4(6):543-50.
  • 3
    Lee HJ, Kwak N, Kim YC, Choi SM, Lee J, Park YS, et al. Impact of sleep duration on mortality and quality of life in chronic kidney disease: results from the 2007-2015 KNHANES. Am J Nephrol. 2021;52(5):396-403.
  • 4
    Park S, Lee S, Kim Y, Lee Y, Kang MW, Kim K, et al. Short or long sleep duration and CKD: a mendelian randomization study. J Am Soc Nephrol. 2020 Dec;31(12):2937-47.
  • 5
    Petrov ME, Buman MP, Unruh ML, Baldwin CM, Jeong M, Reynaga-Ornelas L, et al. Association of sleep duration with kidney function and albuminuria: NHANES 2009-2012. Sleep Health. 2016 Mar;2(1):75-81.
  • 6
    Ricardo AC, Goh V, Chen J, Cedillo-Couvert E, Kapella M, Prasad B, et al. Association of Sleep duration, symptoms, and disorders with mortality in adults with chronic kidney disease. Kidney Int Rep. 2017 Sep;2(5):866-73.
  • 7
    Jackson CL, Umesi C, Gaston SA, Azarbarzin A, Lunyera J, McGrath JA, et al. Multiple, objectively measured sleep dimensions including hypoxic burden and chronic kidney disease: findings from the multi-ethnic study of atherosclerosis. Thorax. 2021 Jul;76(7):704-13.
  • 8
    Elias RM, Chan CT, Bradley TD. Altered sleep structure in patients with end-stage renal disease. Sleep Med. 2016 Apr;20:67-71.
  • 9
    Levey AS, Stevens LA, Schmid CH, Zhang YL, Castro AF, Feldman HI, et al. A new equation to estimate glomerular filtration rate. Ann Intern Med. 2009 May;150(9):604-12.
  • 10
    Morgenthaler T, Alessi C, Friedman L, Owens J, Kapur V, Boehlecke B, et al. Practice parameters for the use of actigraphy in the assessment of sleep and sleep disorders: an update for 2007. Sleep. 2007 Apr;30(4):519-29.
  • 11
    Mazidi M, Shekoohi N, Katsiki N, Banach M. Longer sleep duration may negatively affect renal function. Int Urol Nephrol. 2021 Feb;53(2):325-32.
  • 12
    Nakajima H, Hashimoto Y, Okamura T, Obora A, Kojima T, Hamaguchi M, et al. Association between sleep duration and incident chronic kidney disease: a population-based cohort analysis of the NAGALA Study. Kidney Blood Press Res. 2020;45(2):339-49.
  • 13
    Bo Y, Yeoh EK, Guo C, Zhang Z, Tam T, Chan TC, et al. Sleep and the risk of chronic kidney disease: a cohort study. J Clin Sleep Med. 2019 Mar;15(3):393-400.
  • 14
    Salifu I, Tedla F, Pandey A, Ayoub I, Brown C, McFarlane SI, et al. Sleep duration and chronic kidney disease: analysis of the national health interview survey. Cardiorenal Med. 2014 Dec;4(3-4):210-6.
  • 15
    Yamamoto R, Shinzawa M, Isaka Y, Yamakoshi E, Imai E, Ohashi Y, et al. Sleep quality and sleep duration with CKD are associated with progression to ESKD. Clin J Am Soc Nephrol. 2018 Dec;13(12):1825-32.
  • 16
    Furlan SF, Sinkunas V, Damiani LP, Santos RB, Peres M, Lemos PA, et al. Obstructive sleep apnea, sleep duration and chronic kidney disease in patients with coronary artery disease. Sleep Med. 2021 Aug;84:268-74.
  • 17
    Petrov ME, Kim Y, Lauderdale DS, Lewis CE, Reis JP, Carnethon MR, et al. Objective sleep, a novel risk factor for alterations in kidney function: the CARDIA study. Sleep Med. 2014 Sep;15(9):1140-6.
  • 18
    Nam H, Lim JS, Kim JS, Lee KJ, Koo DL, Lee C. Sleep perception in obstructive sleep apnea: a study using polysomnography and the multiple sleep latency test. J Clin Neurol. 2016 Apr;12(2):230-5.

Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    19 Aug 2022
  • Date of issue
    Jan-Mar 2023

History

  • Received
    27 Jan 2022
  • Accepted
    21 June 2022
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