Genetic and Environmental Factors Shape Infant Sleep Patterns: A Study of 18-Month-Old Twins

Author:

Brescianini Sonia1,Volzone Anna2,Fagnani Corrado1,Patriarca Valeria1,Grimaldi Valentina3,Lanni Roberta4,Serino Laura5,Mastroiacovo Pierpaolo6,Antonietta Stazi Maria1

Affiliation:

1. Centro Nazionale di Epidemiologia, Sorveglianza e Promozione della Salute, Istituto Superiore di Sanità, Rome, Italy;

2. Neurophysiology Unit, “E. Medea,” Conegliano-Pieve di Soligo Research Centre, Conegliano, Italy;

3. ASL Roma B, Rome, Italy;

4. ASL Roma E, Rome, Italy;

5. Department of Public Health, Tor Vergata University, Rome, Italy; and

6. “Alessandra Lisi” International Centre on Birth Defects, Roma, Italy

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Between 25% and 30% of children and adolescents experience sleep disorders. These disorders are complex phenotypes that are regulated by many genes, the environment, and gene-environment interactions. The objective of this study was to evaluate the contribution of genetic and environmental factors to sleep behaviors in early childhood and to contribute to the knowledge on appropriate therapeutic approaches, using a twin design. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Data on sleeping behavior were collected from 314 18-month-old twin pairs (127 monozygotic and 187 dizygotic)using a parent-rated questionnaire. We used structural equation modeling to estimate genetic and environmental variance components for different sleep behaviors (cosleeping, sleep duration, and night awakenings). RESULTS: Shared environment explained almost all (98.3%) of the total variance in cosleeping. Sleep duration was substantially influenced by shared environmental factors (64.1% nocturnal sleep and 61.2% diurnal sleep), with a moderate contribution of additive genetic effects (30.8% and 36.3% for nocturnal and diurnal sleep, respectively). For nocturnal waking episodes, we found a shared environmental contribution of 63.2% and a heritability estimate of 35.3%. CONCLUSIONS: Most sleep disturbances during early childhood are explained by common shared environmental factors, and behavioral interventions adopted by parents and focused on modifying sleep behavior could contribute to solving sleep disturbances in this age group. However, the influence of genetic factors should not be underestimated, and research in this area could clarify the physiologic architecture of sleeping and contribute to selecting appropriate personalized therapeutic approaches.

Publisher

American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health

Reference37 articles.

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