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Clinical Trial Summary

Rural communities in the southern U.S. suffer a disproportionate burden of morbidity and mortality from cardiometabolic disease, with traditional risk factors explaining only a modest proportion of the excess burden of disease. There is considerable evidence that multiple dimensions of sleep health, including sleep duration, efficiency, timing, and regularity, as well as the disorders sleep apnea and insomnia, affect cardiometabolic disease risk. However, there is currently a lack of systematically developed sleep data in rural populations. The RURAL Sleep Study is an ancillary study to a recently initiated longitudinal epidemiology study in rural Appalachia and Mississippi Delta (the RURAL Study). The RURAL Sleep Study will add measures of sleep health to the complex individual, social and environmental factors and health outcome measures being evaluated by the RURAL Study, by incorporating minimally burdensome measures of multiple dimensions of sleep health. The results are expected to inform health care providers, public health officials, and the general public of the prevalence, risk factors, and consequences of impaired sleep health in these rural communities, providing a critical basis for prevention, recognition, and management of sleep disorders and improvement of sleep and cardiometabolic health.


Clinical Trial Description

Rural communities in the southern U.S. suffer a disproportionate burden of morbidity and mortality from cardiometabolic disease, with traditional risk factors explaining only a modest proportion of the excess burden of disease. Growing evidence implicates poor sleep health as an important risk factor for cardiometabolic disease. While this is most well established for sleep apnea and insomnia, there is considerable evidence that multiple dimensions of sleep health, including sleep duration, efficiency, timing, and regularity, also affect cardiometabolic disease risk. Moreover, rural Southern communities are likely to experience high rates of impaired sleep health, reflecting high levels of psychosocial and environmental stressors, such as financial stress, social isolation, environmental pollution, and poor built environment in addition to high rates of smoking and obesity. However, there is currently a lack of systematically developed sleep data in rural populations. Recognizing the paucity of research on cardiometabolic risk in this high-risk rural population, the NHLBI recently initiated a new longitudinal epidemiology study in rural Appalachia and Mississippi Delta (the RURAL Study) to identify the complex individual, social and environmental factors contributing to this high burden of disease. The proposed RURAL Sleep Study will complement the RURAL Study by incorporating minimally burdensome measures of multiple dimensions of sleep health at the time of baseline cohort assessment in approximately 4000 adults age 25-64 years, utilizing mobile health technologies to 1. measure sleep apnea over seven consecutive nights; 2. measure sleep duration, timing, regularity and fragmentation over multiple weeks; and 3. administer standardized questionnaires to assess insomnia, chronotype, sleep quality, sleep-related impairment, and fatigue. These data will allow us to leverage the planned extensive assessments of cardiometabolic risk factors, subclinical disease, and psychosocial and environmental stressors (and resilience factors) to address the following specific aims: Aim 1a. Quantify population distributions of sleep health measures in a rural cohort along dimensions of sleep apnea, insomnia, chronotype, and sleep duration, efficiency, timing, and regularity. Aim 1b. Identify psychosocial, behavioral, and environmental correlates of sleep health in rural communities. Aim 2. Assess the association of sleep health with cardiometabolic risk factors and subclinical cardiovascular disease independent of other established cardiovascular and metabolic risk factors. The results are expected to inform health care providers, public health officials, and the general public of the prevalence, risk factors, and consequences of impaired sleep health in these rural communities, providing a critical basis for prevention, recognition, and management of sleep disorders and improvement of sleep and cardiometabolic health. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT06336525
Study type Observational
Source Brigham and Women's Hospital
Contact Emi Martini
Phone 774-420-9422
Email emartini@bwh.harvard.edu
Status Not yet recruiting
Phase
Start date May 1, 2024
Completion date January 31, 2027

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