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Sleep disturbance is common among individuals at risk of psychosis, yet few studies have investigated the relationship between sleep disturbance and clinical trajectory. The Early Detection and Intervention Evaluation (EDIE-2) trial provides longitudinal data on sleep duration and individual psychotic experiences from a cohort of individuals at risk of psychosis, which this study utilises in an opportunistic secondary analysis. Shorter and more variable sleep was hypothesised to be associated with more severe psychotic experiences and lower psychological wellbeing. Mixed effect models were used to test sleep duration and range as predictors of individual psychotic experiences and psychological wellbeing over the 12-24 months (with assessments every 3 months) in 160 participants. Shorter sleep duration was associated with more severe delusional ideas and hallucinations cross-sectionally and longitudinally. The longitudinal relationships did not remain significant after conservative controls were added for the previous severity of psychotic experiences. No significant relationships were found between the sleep variables and other psychotic experiences (e.g. cognitive disorganisation), or psychological wellbeing. The results support a relationship between shorter sleep duration and delusional ideas and hallucinations. Future studies should focus on improving sleep disturbance measurement, and test whether treating sleep improves clinical trajectory in the at-risk group.

Original publication

DOI

10.1016/j.schres.2018.08.006

Type

Journal article

Journal

Schizophr Res

Publication Date

02/2019

Volume

204

Pages

326 - 333

Keywords

At risk, Longitudinal, Psychosis, Sleep, Adolescent, Adult, Comorbidity, Cross-Sectional Studies, Delusions, Early Diagnosis, Early Medical Intervention, Female, Hallucinations, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Psychotic Disorders, Risk, Sleep, Sleep Wake Disorders, Young Adult