Sleep deficiency among people living with human immunodeficiency virus: A growing challenge

Author:

Reisert Hailey1ORCID,Miner Brienne2ORCID,Farhadian Shelli134ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Yale School of Medicine, Section of Infectious Diseases New Haven Connecticut USA

2. Yale School of Medicine, Section of Geriatrics New Haven Connecticut USA

3. Department of Neurology Yale School of Medicine New Haven Connecticut USA

4. Department of Epidemiology of Microbial Diseases Yale School of Public Health New Haven Connecticut USA

Abstract

AbstractPurpose of reviewThe purpose of this narrative review is to consolidate and summarize the existing literature on sleep deficiency among people living with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV; PLWH), to discuss the potential impact of antiretroviral therapy on sleep deficiency and to identify priorities for future research in this area.Recent findingsThree important domains of sleep deficiency include alterations in sleep quality (including sleep disorders), duration and timing. The existing HIV and sleep deficiency literature, which is robust for sleep quality but sparser for sleep duration or sleep timing, has identified epidemiological correlates and outcomes associated with sleep deficiency including sociodemographic factors, HIV‐specific factors, aspects of physical and mental health and cognition.SummarySleep deficiency is a common problem among PLWH and is likely underdiagnosed, although more high‐quality research is needed in this area. Sleep quality has received the most attention in the literature via methodologies that assess subjective/self‐reported sleep quality, objective sleep quality or both. There is significantly less research on sleep duration and minimal research on sleep timing. Use of certain antiretroviral therapy drugs may be associated with sleep deficiency for some individuals. Future research should utilize larger, longitudinal studies with consistent, comprehensive and validated methods to assess both subjective and objective measures of sleep deficiency to better understand the prevalence, correlates and clinical implications of sleep deficiency in PLWH.

Funder

American Federation for Aging Research

National Institute on Aging

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Pharmacology (medical),Infectious Diseases,Health Policy

Reference117 articles.

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3. National Heart Lung and Blood Institute. Sleep Deprivation and Deficiency. Available at:https://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/health/sleep-deprivation. Accessed 19 November 2022.

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5. Incidence and remission of insomnia among elderly adults: an epidemiologic study of 6,800 persons over three years;Foley DJ;Sleep,1999

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