Contribution of Comorbid Conditions to the Diagnosis of Insomnia

Author:

Liu Xinyue1,Dibello Julia1,Mott Katrina1,Wang Yuanxin2,Chekani Farid3,Bortnichak Edward A.1,Liaw Kai-Li1,Zhong Wenjun1

Affiliation:

1. Epidemiology, Biostatistics, and Research Decision Sciences, Merck & Co, Inc, West Point, Pennsylvania

2. Bioinformatics and Computational Biology, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas

3. Product Line, Center for Observational and Real-world Evidence, Merck & Co, Inc, Upper Gwynedd, Pennsylvania.

Abstract

Abstract Insomnia is a common sleep disorder characterized as dissatisfaction with sleep quantity or quality resulting in distress or impairment of social, occupational, or other daily functioning. It is unknown if there are medical conditions that have strong associations with insomnia but are unrecognized in previous literature. In this cross-sectional study based on IBM Marketscan Research Databases, we measured insomnia and 78 medical conditions in patients with 2-year continuous enrollment during 2018–2019. We selected important comorbidities associated with insomnia for eight age-sex groups and built logistic regression models to measure the associations. The prevalence of diagnosed insomnia increased with age, from <0.4% in the age group 0–17 to 4%–5% in the age group ≥65. Females had a higher prevalence of insomnia than males. Anxiety and depression were two important comorbidities across all age-sex subgroups. Most odds ratios of comorbidities remained significant after adjusting for other comorbidities in regression models. We did not find any new medical conditions that had strong associations with insomnia but were unrecognized in previous literature. The findings can help physicians use comorbidities to identify patients with high risk of insomnia.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health

Reference17 articles.

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