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Associations among nocturnal sleep, daytime intradialytic sleep, and mortality risk in patients on daytime conventional hemodialysis: US R enal D ata S ystem special study data
Author(s) -
Kutner Nancy,
Zhang Rebecca,
Johansen Kirsten,
Bliwise Donald
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
hemodialysis international
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.658
H-Index - 47
eISSN - 1542-4758
pISSN - 1492-7535
DOI - 10.1111/hdi.12005
Subject(s) - medicine , hazard ratio , hemodialysis , nocturnal , confidence interval , sleep (system call) , odds ratio , proportional hazards model , home hemodialysis , computer science , operating system
Fragmented nocturnal sleep is commonly reported by patients undergoing daytime conventional hemodialysis ( CHD ) and may be associated with higher mortality risk. Subjective sleepiness during CHD is also frequently observed. We examined the association of reported sleep fragmentation and nocturnal and daytime (intradialytic) sleep durations with survival in a national cohort of 1440 CHD patients who were interviewed in 2005–2007 in a phone survey conducted by the US Renal Data System. Patient survival was followed through S eptember 30, 2010 in the US Renal Data System. A total of 76% of patients reported that they typically dozed off or slept during their treatment, and intradialytic dozing was especially common among patients whose treatment shift started before 1000 hours. There was a trend for patients who reported dozing during CHD to report nocturnal sleep fragmentation (60.4% vs. 55.1%; P = 0.07). With adjustment for intradialytic sleep and other covariates, nocturnal sleep fragmentation was not associated with survival. Mortality risk was higher for patients who reported sleeping 9 or more hours/night compared with the referent category of nocturnal sleep equal to 6–7 hours (hazard ratio: 1.50 [95% confidence interval: 1.04–2.17]; P = 0.03). Continued investigation of the association of timing and duration of sleep with hemodialysis patient outcomes is warranted.