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Short or long sleep duration and CKD: A mendelian randomization study

Cited 60 time in Web of Science Cited 59 time in Scopus
Authors

Park, Sehoon; Lee, Soojin; Kim, Yaerim; Lee, Yeonhee; Kang, Min Woo; Kim, Kwangsoo; Kim, Yong Chul; Han, Seung Seok; Lee, Hajeong; Lee, Jung Pyo; Joo, Kwon Wook; Lim, Chun Soo; Kim, Yon Su; Kim, Dong Ki

Issue Date
2020-12
Publisher
Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Ltd.
Citation
Journal of the American Society of Nephrology : JASN, Vol.31 No.12, pp.2937-2947
Abstract
Background Studies have found sleeping behaviors, such as sleep duration, to be associated with kidney function and cardiovascular disease risk. However, whether short or long sleep duration is a causative factor for kidney function impairment has been rarely studied. Methods We studied data from participants aged 40-69 years in the UK Biobank prospective cohort, including 25,605 self- reporting short- duration sleep (< 6 hours per 24 hours), 404,550 reporting intermediate-duration sleep (6-8 hours), and 35,659 reporting long-duration sleep (>= 9 hours) in the clinical analysis. Using logistic regression analysis, we investigated the observational association between the sleep duration group and prevalent CKD stages 3-5, analyzed by logistic regression analysis. We performed Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis involving 321,260 White British individuals using genetic instruments (genetic variants linked with short- or long-duration sleep behavior as instrumental variables). We performed genetic risk score analysis as a one-sampleMR and extended the finding with a two- sample MR analysis with CKD outcome information from the independent CKDGen Consortium genome-wide association study meta-analysis. Results Short or long sleep duration clinically associated with higher prevalence of CKD compared with intermediate duration. The genetic risk score for short (but not long) sleepwas significantly related to CKD (per unit reflecting a two-fold increase in the odds of the phenotype; adjusted odds ratio, 1.80; 95% confidence interval, 1.25 to 2.60). Two-sample MR analysis demonstrated causal effects of short sleep duration on CKDby the inverse varianceweightedmethod, supported by causal estimates fromMR-Egger regression. Conclusions These findings support an adverse effect of a short sleep duration on kidney function. Clinicians may encourage patients to avoid short-duration sleeping behavior to reduce CKD risk.
ISSN
1046-6673
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/194965
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1681/ASN.2020050666
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