This study specifically assessed insomnia-related factors in adult CF patients. It highlighted a high prevalence of insomnia in adult CF patients with 43% of patients exhibiting an ISI score > 7 and, in particular, showed that insomnia is strongly associated with anxiety/depression symptoms in this population.
Several screening tools can be used to diagnose insomnia. A recent meta-analysis compared the three scales most commonly used to screen for insomnia: PSQI, Athens Insomnia Scale (AIS) and ISI (38) and identified comparable diagnostic properties, with AIS and ISI providing better results in terms of specificity than PSQI. Of note, PSQI does not directly assess insomnia symptoms, but rather evaluates a broad range of sleep domains affecting sleep quality. AIS and ISI were developed according to standard insomnia diagnostic criteria. The AIS was designed to quantify sleep difficulties based on the ICD-10 (International Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems-10). The ISI captures the diagnostic criteria for insomnia defined in DSM-IV (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders - IV) and the ICSD (International Classification of Sleep Disorders). In addition, ISI is easy to use and not time-consuming in clinical practice. As expected, the presence of insomnia according to ISI was associated with a higher PSQI score in our study.
Our study showed a high prevalence of insomnia in clinically stable adult CF patients (43%), which is closely comparable to that a previous study in CF young adults, using AIS (41.7%) (12). For comparison, the prevalence of insomnia in healthy young adults (25–34 years old) is about 18% in France, according to a large epidemiological study conducted in 2001 (39). Forty-six percent of patients in our study also had poor sleep quality (ie, PSQI score > 5). These results are similar to those of several studies conducted in CF adults that reported impaired sleep quality according to PSQI in 37 to 66% of patients (8) (10) (11) (15).
RLS was significantly more common in insomniac patients in our study. A recent study has shown that about one-third of adult CF patients experience RLS (16). The prevalence of RLS was lower in our study population (18%), but the presence of RLS was systematically associated with an ISI score > 7, suggesting that RLS may have a negative impact on sleep quality. Periodic limb movements were not observed in patients who underwent full-night polysomnography, but they may be absent during PSG in a considerable proportion of patients.
Pain (15), with a mean score of "mild" in these stable patients, and dyspnea were the two symptoms more frequently associated with insomnia in our study.
Apart from mean SpO2 during sleep (9), we did not find any associations between insomnia, as assessed by ISI, and physiological variables describing the severity of respiratory disease, probably due to the less marked respiratory impairment in our study compared to the study by Milross et al (10) (mean FEV1 72 (39–93)% vs mean FEV1 36 ± 12%). Decreased mean SpO2 during sleep in insomniac patients could explained the fact that dyspnea is more severe in this group.
The main factor associated with insomnia in our study was higher HAD anxiety and depression scores. It was already shown that reduced sleep quality and daytime sleepiness were associated with poorer mood in children and young adults with CF (6) (12). Available data suggest that, as in other chronic diseases, symptoms of anxiety and depression are common features in CF patients. In a study carried out on 4,739 adult CF patients across nine countries in Europe and the USA, symptoms of anxiety and depression were found in 32% and 19% of patients, respectively (36% had an HAD anxiety score > 7, 18% had an HAD depression score > 7 in our study). Overall, anxiety and depression scores were 2- to 3-fold higher than those of community samples (40). Although anxiety and depression are known to be a cause of insomnia (41), a causal relationship cannot be established between insomnia and anxiety/depression, but the presence of insomnia symptoms should prompt physicians to investigate the presence of and treat anxiety/depression symptoms and vice versa.
Quality of life was more severely impaired in patients with insomnia, especially for the categories concerning physical functioning, vitality, emotional state, health perception, social functioning, body image, role limitations and respiratory and digestive symptoms. These results are consistent with those of a study reported by Bouka et al (11), in which lower sleep quality was related to vitality, emotional functioning, social, role, eating disturbances and digestive symptoms. It is noteworthy that these symptoms may also be an expression of anxiety and/or depression.
Total sleep time and sleep architecture, analyzed by PSG, were generally normal in patients with and without insomnia. Total sleep time on PSG was slightly longer in patients without insomnia than in patients with insomnia and the time spent awake after sleep onset was slightly, but not significantly shorter, probably due to the lack of power of the study.
This study has several limitations. First, it was a single-center study comprising a small number of patients, which may limit the generalizability of the results. It would also have been interesting to assess insomnia by actimetry over several days to obtain objectives measurements on activity and rest periods. Despite these limitations, this pragmatic study presents a number of important strengths, including assessment of the relationships in CF adult patients between insomnia, assessed by ISI, and multidimensional parameters including demographic and clinical characteristics, and a global respiratory assessment (symptoms, airway colonization, PFTs, 6MWT, polysomnography) with minimal exclusion criteria.