Interaction effects between insomnia and depression on risk of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest: Multi-center study

Author:

Jung Eujene,Ryu Hyun HoORCID,Kim Sung Wan,Lee Jung Ho,Song Kyoung Jun,Ro Young Sun,Cha Kyoung Chul,Hwang Sung Oh,

Abstract

Background Insomnia and depression have been known to be risk factors of several diseases, including coronary heart disease. We hypothesized that insomnia affects the out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) incidence, and these effects may vary depending on whether it is accompanied by depression. This study aimed to determine the association between insomnia and OHCA incidence and whether the effect of insomnia is influenced by depression. Methods This prospective multicenter case-control study was performed using Phase II Cardiac Arrest Pursuit Trial with Unique Registration and Epidemiology Surveillance (CAPTURES-II) project database for OHCA cases and community-based controls in Korea. The main exposure was history of insomnia. We conducted conditional logistic regression analysis to estimate the effect of insomnia on the risk of OHCA incidence and performed interaction analysis between insomnia and depression. Finally, subgroup analysis was conducted in the patients with insomnia. Results Insomnia was not associated with increased OHCA risk (0.95 [0.64–1.40]). In the interaction analysis, insomnia interacted with depression on OHCA incidence in the young population. Insomnia was associated with significantly higher odds of OHCA incidence (3.65 [1.29–10.33]) in patients with depression than in those without depression (0.84 [0.59–1.17]). In the subgroup analysis, depression increased OHCA incidence only in patients who were not taking insomnia medication (3.66 [1.15–11.66]). Conclusion Insomnia with depression is a risk factor for OHCA in the young population. This trend was maintained only in the population not consuming insomnia medication. Early and active medical intervention for patients with insomnia may contribute to lowering the risk of OHCA.

Funder

Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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