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Impact of Sleep Duration on Immune Balance in Urban Children With Asthma

Not Applicable
Recruiting
Conditions
Sleep Hygiene
Asthma in Children
Sleep, Inadequate
Interventions
Behavioral: Shortened Sleep
Behavioral: Stabilized sleep
Registration Number
NCT05420766
Lead Sponsor
Rhode Island Hospital
Brief Summary

Urban children with asthma are at high risk for short sleep, due to an environment that jeopardizes both sleep and asthma management. Further, urban children with asthma suffer from altered immune balance, a key biological process contributing to individual differences in asthma morbidity and sleep health. In the proposed research, the researchers will examine the effects of shortened and recovery sleep on immune balance and associated changes in lung function in urban children with allergic asthma through an experimental design.

Detailed Description

Urban children with asthma are at high risk for short sleep, due to an environment that jeopardizes sleep and asthma management. Further, this group suffers from altered immune balance, a key biological process contributing to individual differences in asthma morbidity and sleep health. Allergic asthma is a chronic inflammatory disorder driven primarily by disturbed T helper 1 (Th1)/ 2 (Th2) cytokine balance marked by Th2 cytokine (IL-4, IL-5 and/or IL-13) predominance. Experimental findings in healthy adults show that shortened sleep increases inflammatory cytokine (e.g., IL-6) and certain Th2 cytokine levels and that recovery sleep following sleep restriction promotes a return to immune balance. Whether sleep duration plays a key role in immune function and associated asthma activity in urban children with asthma remains a scientific gap. The researchers use an experimental design that targets sleep duration, because (1) the urban environment and asthma symptoms interact to shorten sleep, (2) sleep duration is a modifiable behavior overlooked in clinical care of urban children with asthma, and (3) experimental data are critical to test a causal link for sleep duration as a mechanism underlying immune balance and asthma.

The research team will enroll urban children (N=204; ages 7-11 years) with persistent allergic asthma and adequate sleep duration (9-11 h) who will complete a 4-week within-subjects protocol that includes 3 scheduled experimental sleep conditions: (1) 1 week stabilized sleep (individualized; 9-11 h time in bed), (2) 1 week shortened sleep (1.5 h decrease in time in bed), and (3) 2 weeks recovery sleep (1.5 h increase in time in bed). Sleep duration (actigraphy) and lung function (home spirometry) will be monitored daily and assess immune biomarkers weekly and at the midpoint of shortened sleep. To control time-in-study effects, 1/3 of the sample will receive only the stabilized sleep schedule across the 4-week protocol. In this project, the researchers will study only urban children with allergic asthma who obtain sufficient sleep (9-11 h, within national guidelines). The shortened sleep protocol will model the sleep loss that urban children with asthma can experience due to asthma and/or urban context. Additionally, the recovery sleep protocol simulates a sleep optimization intervention following shortened sleep in a well-controlled approach.

The first aim of the study is to examine the effects of shortened sleep on immune balance \[e.g., Th1 (Interferon-IFN gamma)/Th2 (Interleukin-IL-4, IL-5, IL-13)R and plasma IL-6 levels\]. The second aim involves determining the effects of recovery sleep on immune balance. The third aim involves examining the extent to which changes in immune balance are associated with changes in asthma-related lung function (changes in FEV1) under conditions of shortened and recovery sleep. Results from this study ultimately will support the development feasible, ecologically valid, and clinically meaningful interventions to optimize sleep duration, immune balance, and asthma in this at-risk group.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
204
Inclusion Criteria

Not provided

Exclusion Criteria

Not provided

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Shortened SleepShortened SleepIn this 4-week sleep protocol, children in this experimental condition follow a Stabilized Sleep schedule (i.e., their usual bed time) during weeks 1, 3 and 4. During week 2, they follow a Shortened Sleep schedule, during which they go to bed 90 later than is typical.
Usual Sleep ScheduleStabilized sleepIn this control arm of the 4-week sleep protocol, children follow the Stabilized Sleep schedule for all 4 weeks.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
10mL of heparinized bloodChanges in immune function across Days 7, 11, 14, 21 and 28 of the 4-week sleep protocol

Changes in the immune biomarker profile related to lung function and asthma morbidity: CD4+IFNy+ Th1 cells; CD4+IL4+, CD4+IL5+, CD4+IL13+ Th2 cells; plasma IL-6

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Forced Expiratory Flow in 1 second (FEV1) % predictedLung function over the 4-week sleep protocol

Asthma-related lung function

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Rhode Island Hospital

🇺🇸

Providence, Rhode Island, United States

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