AUTHOR=Tong Jianqian , Li Changbin , Hu Jiangshan , Teng Yincheng , Zhou Yang , Tao Minfang TITLE=Association of sleep characteristics with renal function in menopausal women without recognized chronic kidney disease JOURNAL=Frontiers in Psychiatry VOLUME=13 YEAR=2022 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/psychiatry/articles/10.3389/fpsyt.2022.1024245 DOI=10.3389/fpsyt.2022.1024245 ISSN=1664-0640 ABSTRACT=Objective

To delineate the association between sleep characteristics and renal function in peri-post menopause free of Chronic kidney disease (CKD) as well as cardiometabolic and hormone indicators.

Methods

Cross-sectional data from a total of 823 Han-Chinese women aged 40–67 years who visited the Menopause Clinic in the Shanghai Sixth People’s Hospital from November 2011 to November 2020 were analyzed through the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) and serum cystatin C (Cys-C). Logistic regression models were used to assess the association between cumulative/each sleep parameter and renal function after adjusting for cardiometabolic variables.

Results

After confounding factors, we identified that poor perceived sleep quality, shorter sleep duration (<6 h), low sleep efficiency (<75%), delayed sleep latency and worse sleep disturbance elevated more than doubled the odds ratio for declining renal function (≥0.91 mg/dL, the highest Cys-C) in postmenopause in a graded fashion. Meanwhile, multiple logistic regression analysis revealed that sleep disorder (PSQI ≥ 8), late postmenopause, highest quartile independently increased the odds ratio for declining renal function (OR 2.007, 95% CI: 1.408–2.861, OR = 3.287, 95%CI: 3.425–8.889, OR = 2.345, 95% CI: 1.310–4.199, respectively), while participants with menopausal hormone replacement (MHT) lower the odds of declining renal function (OR = 0.486, 95% CI: 0.324–0.728).

Conclusion

The findings proposed that maintaining good sleep quality should be attached great importance to postmenopausal women, which provides clinical evidence for the feasible early detection and effective prevention such as MHT of renal disease progression in postmenopausal women.