Association between sleep quality and type 2 diabetes at 20-year follow-up in the Southall and Brent REvisited (SABRE) cohort: a triethnic analysis

Author:

Ong Zhen LingORCID,Chaturvedi Nishi,Tillin Therese,Dale Caroline,Garfield VictoriaORCID

Abstract

BackgroundThe risk of developing type 2 diabetes associated with poor sleep quality is comparable to other lifestyle factors (eg, overweight, physical inactivity). In the UK, these risk factors could not explain the two to three-fold excess risks in South-Asian and African-Caribbean men compared with Europeans. This study investigates (1) the association between mid-life sleep quality and later-life type 2 diabetes risk and (2) the potential modifying effect of ethnicity.MethodsThe Southall and Brent REvisited cohort is composed of Europeans, South-Asians and African-Caribbeans (median follow-up 19 years). Complete-case analysis was performed on 2189 participants without diabetes at baseline (age=51.7±7 SD). Competing risks regressions were used to estimate the HRs of developing diabetes associated with self-reported baseline sleep (difficulty falling asleep, early morning waking, waking up tired, snoring and a composite sleep score), adjusting for confounders. Modifying effects of ethnicity were analysed by conducting interaction tests and ethnicity-stratified analyses.ResultsThere were 484 occurrences of incident type 2 diabetes (22%). Overall, there were no associations between sleep exposures and diabetes risk. Interaction tests suggested a possible modifying effect for South-Asians compared with Europeans for snoring only (p=0.056). The ethnicity-stratified analysis found an association with snoring among South-Asians (HR 1.41, 95% CI 1.08 to 1.85), comparing those who snored often/always versus occasionally/never. There were no elevated risks for the other sleep exposures.ConclusionThe association between snoring and type 2 diabetes appeared to be modified by ethnicity, and was strongest in South-Asians.

Funder

Wellcome Trust

UK Medical Research Council

British Heart Foundation

National Institute for Health Research University College London Hospitals Biomedical Research Centre

National Institute of Health Research Clinical Research Networks (NIHR) Diabetes Research Network

Diabetes UK

British Heart Foundation and Diabetes UK

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Epidemiology

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