Trajectories of Actigraphy-Derived Sleep Duration, Quality, and Variability from Childhood to Adolescence: Downstream Effects on Mental Health

Sleep. 2024 May 17:zsae112. doi: 10.1093/sleep/zsae112. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Study objectives: We examined growth trajectories of four actigraphy-derived sleep parameters (sleep minutes, sleep efficiency, and variability in sleep minutes and efficiency across a week of assessments) across childhood and adolescence and examined individual differences in trajectories according to participants' race/ethnicity and sex. We also assessed the predictive effect of growth trajectories of sleep parameters on growth trajectories of mental health outcomes and moderation by race and sex.

Method: Youth (N=199, 49% female, 65% White, 32% Black, 3% biracial) and their parents participated in five waves of data (M ages were 9, 10, 11, 17, and 18 across waves). Participants were from a diverse range of socioeconomic backgrounds.

Results: Across participants, sleep minutes, sleep efficiency, and variability in sleep minutes and efficiency demonstrated significant linear change across childhood and adolescence. Whereas sleep duration shortened over time, sleep efficiency improved. Youth exhibited increases in night-to-night variability in sleep minutes and reductions in night-to-night variability in sleep efficiency. Highlighting the importance of individual differences, some race- and sex-related effects emerged. Black youth and male youth experienced steeper declines in their sleep duration across development relative to their respective counterparts. Black youth also demonstrated smaller improvements in sleep efficiency and greater variability in sleep efficiency compared to White youth. Finally, trajectories of sleep efficiency and variability in sleep minutes predicted trajectories of internalizing symptoms and externalizing behaviors.

Conclusions: Findings showed significant changes in developmental trajectories of four sleep parameters across childhood and adolescence. We discuss empirical and translational implications of the findings.

Keywords: children and adolescents; externalizing symptoms; growth modeling; internalizing symptoms; longitudinal; sleep efficiency; sleep minutes; sleep variability.