Impact of Yo-Yo Sleep on Cardiometabolic Health

Purpose

The goal of this clinical trial is to test the impact of repeated intermittent short sleep, with short sleep maintained 5 days per week followed by 2 days of prolonged sleep, compared to daily adequate sleep, on energy balance and cardiometabolic risk. A secondary goal of this research is to determine if maintaining a constant midpoint of sleep while undergoing intermittent short sleep, leads to better outcomes than intermittent short sleep with a 2-hour delay in sleep midpoint. The aims of this research will be tested in the context of a 3-group, parallel-arm, outpatient intervention of 4 weeks in duration, in young-to-middle-aged adults (aged 18-49 years).

Conditions

  • Cardiometabolic Syndrome
  • Obesity

Eligibility

Eligible Ages
Between 18 Years and 49 Years
Eligible Genders
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Yes

Inclusion Criteria

  • Aged 18 to 49 years - BMI 20-29.9 kg/m2 - Habitually sleeping 7-9 hours/night without sleep aids or naps

Exclusion Criteria

  • Sleep disorders - Psychiatric disorders (including eating disorders) and seasonal affective disorder - Pregnancy (current/prior year) - Breastfeeding - Smokers (Any cigarette smoking or ex-smokers <3years) - Diabetes - Elevated blood pressure, taking beta-blockers - Individuals taking anti-coagulants or anti-platelets - Recent weight change or participation in a weight loss program or have ever had bariatric surgery or other weight loss or gastrointestinal procedure. - Travel across time zones; shift work (non-traditional hours)

Study Design

Phase
N/A
Study Type
Interventional
Allocation
Randomized
Intervention Model
Parallel Assignment
Intervention Model Description
3-arm, parallel study design
Primary Purpose
Basic Science
Masking
Single (Outcomes Assessor)
Masking Description
Statistician will be blinded to intervention allocation; blinding of study participants is not possible due to the intervention type.

Arm Groups

ArmDescriptionAssigned Intervention
Active Comparator
Stable Adequate Sleep (SAS)
Participants will go to bed and wake up at the same time every night, maintaining adequate sleep duration.
  • Behavioral: Sustained Adequate Sleep (SAS)
    Goal of ≥7 hours of sleep/night with 8 hours of time in bed (TIB).
    Other names:
    • SAS
Experimental
ISS_Alone
Intermittent short sleep (ISS) 5 nights of 5.5 hours time in bed 2 nights of 9.5 hours time in bed with advanced bedtimes and delayed wake times
  • Behavioral: Intermittent Short Sleep (ISS)
    Restricted sleep duration of <5.5 h/night for 5 nights (SR) followed by 2 nights of 9.5 hours of time in bed (TIB) (recover sleep) each week.
    Other names:
    • ISS
Experimental
ISS_SJL
Intermittent short sleep with short jetlag (SJL) 5 nights of 5.5 hours time in bed 2 nights of 9.5 hours time in bed with constant bedtimes and delayed wake times
  • Behavioral: Intermittent Short Sleep (ISS)
    Restricted sleep duration of <5.5 h/night for 5 nights (SR) followed by 2 nights of 9.5 hours of time in bed (TIB) (recover sleep) each week.
    Other names:
    • ISS
  • Behavioral: Social Jetlag (SJL)
    2-hour delayed sleep timing.
    Other names:
    • SJL

Recruiting Locations

Columbia University Irving Medical Center
New York, New York 10032
Contact:
Marie-Pierre St-Onge, PhD
212-305-9549
ms2554@cumc.columbia.edu

More Details

Status
Recruiting
Sponsor
Columbia University

Study Contact

Marie-Pierre St-Onge, PhD
212-305-9549
ms2554@cumc.columbia.edu

Detailed Description

A large portion of the U.S. adult population reports insufficient sleep on a nightly basis. It has been shown that sustained insufficient sleep leads to adverse cardiometabolic risk profile and positive energy balance. However, sleep patterns in real life are not consistent over weeks. Individuals not obtaining sufficient sleep during the week may compensate by sleeping longer on weekends. The differences in sleep duration between week and weekend nights is approximately 1 hour, mostly due to delaying wake times rather than advancing bedtimes. A drawback of such behaviors is resultant change in sleep midpoint, which has been associated with adverse cardiometabolic health and obesity. However, very few studies have attempted to determine whether recovery sleep on weekends results in reversal of adverse health effects of insufficient sleep during the week. Available studies suggest that recovery sleep does not revert health markers to pre-sleep restriction (SR) levels. But these studies are short, usually involving only one cycle of SR followed by recovery sleep, and fail to use appropriate and robust statistical methods. Therefore, the goal of the current investigation is to evaluate the impact of repeated intermittent short sleep, with short sleep maintained 5 days/week followed by 2 days of recovery sleep, relative to daily adequate sleep, on energy balance and cardiometabolic risk markers. A secondary goal of this research is to determine if maintaining a constant sleep timing while undergoing intermittent short sleep, leads to better outcomes than intermittent short sleep in conjunction with shifts in sleep times.