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Childhood-onset insomnia is a chronic problem in 43% of children, based on 15-year follow-up data from approximately 500 individuals.
Difficulty initiating or maintaining sleep (DIMS) is the most frequently reported insomnia symptom in children and teens, but longitudinal data on the trajectory of insomnia symptoms from childhood into adulthood are limited, Julio Fernandez-Mendoza, PhD, of Penn State University, Hershey, and colleagues wrote.
Previous studies have shown varying results, notably on the effect of objective short sleep duration (OSSD), they said. The extent to which the effect of OSSD on insomnia trajectories, and whether OSSD affects the development of insomnia in the transition to adulthood remains uncertain.
In a study published in Pediatrics, the researchers reviewed data from 502 children who enrolled at age 5-12 years between 2000 and 2005. The participants underwent laboratory polysomnography visits at baseline; 421 had a second laboratory visit between 2010 and 2013 (median age, 16 years), and 502 completed a structured self-reported survey between 2018 and 2021 at a median age of 24 years. At the first visit, 118 children met criteria for insomnia, defined as parent reports of often/moderate or very often/severe DIMS and/or use of over-the-counter or prescription sleep medications for DIMS. At the second visit, 120 children met the definition for insomnia.
Among children with insomnia symptoms at baseline, 53.7% had persistence of insomnia symptoms in adolescence and 61.9% had symptoms in young adulthood; 46.3% and 38.1% remitted at these times.
Among children with insomnia symptoms at adolescence, 57.5% and 42.5% had persistence and remittance, respectively, in young adulthood.
In children with insomnia at baseline, therefore, the most frequent developmental trajectory was persistence (43.3%) followed by remission (26.9% since childhood and 11.2% since adolescence) and a waxing and waning pattern (18.6%), the researchers said.
Among children with normal sleep at baseline, 69.7% retained normal sleep patterns in adolescence and 63.3% retained normal sleep in young adulthood; 30.3% and 36.7% developed insomnia in adolescence and young adulthood, respectively.
Overall, adult insomnia was reported by 22.0% and 20.8% of individuals with childhood and adolescent insomnia, respectively. In a multivariate analysis, the odds of adult insomnia were 2.6 times and 5.5 times higher among those with histories of short-sleeping in childhood and adolescence, respectively.
“The most common developmental trajectory for insomnia symptoms was that of persistence from childhood through young adulthood,” the researchers wrote in their discussion of the study.
“These 15-year longitudinal findings across three developmental stages indicate that insomnia symptoms should not be expected to developmentally remit in at least 40% of children and that adolescence is a critical developmental period for the adverse prognosis of the insomnia with short sleep duration phenotype,” they emphasized.
The study findings were limited by several factors including the collection of OSSD and other sleep data via a 1-night, 9-hour polysomnography, which might not be representative of habitual sleep at home, the researchers noted. Other limitations include the lack of polysomnography data to accompany the young adult survey and the inability to validate insomnia in young adults via strict diagnostic criteria.
However, the results reveal that the persistence of childhood insomnia is higher than suggested in previous studies, and that these children and adolescents, especially short sleepers, are at significantly increased risk of adult insomnia, the researchers concluded.
“Early sleep interventions are a priority, as clinicians should not expect insomnia symptoms to developmentally remit in a high proportion of children, although objective sleep measures may be indicated in adolescence to identify those with poorer long-term prognosis,” they said.
Pandemic prompts interest in sleep issues
The current study is important at this time because sleep disruptions in children and adolescents have increased over the course of the COVID-19 pandemic, Karalyn Kinsella, MD, a pediatrician in private practice in Cheshire, Conn., said in an interview.
Dr. Kinsella said she was especially surprised to see that adolescent insomnia will most likely not remit in young adulthood, as she had considered it a disorder of adolescence.
The study highlights the need for early intervention to manage insomnia in children. However, there are several barriers to such intervention. “Parents [of young children] are overwhelmed and just need sleep themselves, so they don’t always have the energy to work on good sleep habits in their children,” she said. Improving sleep habits in adolescents requires overcoming the barrier of the young patients’ attitudes. “For adolescents, they need to buy into the change.”
However, the take-home message for clinicians is that it is important to work to overcome these barriers and improve sleep in children and teens, because the longitudinal data suggest that the problem is “likely to persist and unlikely to remit,” for many, she said.
As for additional studies, “I would like to see more research done on neurologic and psychological causes of insomnia,” Dr. Kinsella said.
The study was supported in part by grants from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; National Institute of Mental Health; and the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences of the National Institutes of Health. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose. Dr. Kinsella had no financial conflicts to disclose and serves on the editorial advisory board of Pediatric News.
Childhood-onset insomnia is a chronic problem in 43% of children, based on 15-year follow-up data from approximately 500 individuals.
Difficulty initiating or maintaining sleep (DIMS) is the most frequently reported insomnia symptom in children and teens, but longitudinal data on the trajectory of insomnia symptoms from childhood into adulthood are limited, Julio Fernandez-Mendoza, PhD, of Penn State University, Hershey, and colleagues wrote.
Previous studies have shown varying results, notably on the effect of objective short sleep duration (OSSD), they said. The extent to which the effect of OSSD on insomnia trajectories, and whether OSSD affects the development of insomnia in the transition to adulthood remains uncertain.
In a study published in Pediatrics, the researchers reviewed data from 502 children who enrolled at age 5-12 years between 2000 and 2005. The participants underwent laboratory polysomnography visits at baseline; 421 had a second laboratory visit between 2010 and 2013 (median age, 16 years), and 502 completed a structured self-reported survey between 2018 and 2021 at a median age of 24 years. At the first visit, 118 children met criteria for insomnia, defined as parent reports of often/moderate or very often/severe DIMS and/or use of over-the-counter or prescription sleep medications for DIMS. At the second visit, 120 children met the definition for insomnia.
Among children with insomnia symptoms at baseline, 53.7% had persistence of insomnia symptoms in adolescence and 61.9% had symptoms in young adulthood; 46.3% and 38.1% remitted at these times.
Among children with insomnia symptoms at adolescence, 57.5% and 42.5% had persistence and remittance, respectively, in young adulthood.
In children with insomnia at baseline, therefore, the most frequent developmental trajectory was persistence (43.3%) followed by remission (26.9% since childhood and 11.2% since adolescence) and a waxing and waning pattern (18.6%), the researchers said.
Among children with normal sleep at baseline, 69.7% retained normal sleep patterns in adolescence and 63.3% retained normal sleep in young adulthood; 30.3% and 36.7% developed insomnia in adolescence and young adulthood, respectively.
Overall, adult insomnia was reported by 22.0% and 20.8% of individuals with childhood and adolescent insomnia, respectively. In a multivariate analysis, the odds of adult insomnia were 2.6 times and 5.5 times higher among those with histories of short-sleeping in childhood and adolescence, respectively.
“The most common developmental trajectory for insomnia symptoms was that of persistence from childhood through young adulthood,” the researchers wrote in their discussion of the study.
“These 15-year longitudinal findings across three developmental stages indicate that insomnia symptoms should not be expected to developmentally remit in at least 40% of children and that adolescence is a critical developmental period for the adverse prognosis of the insomnia with short sleep duration phenotype,” they emphasized.
The study findings were limited by several factors including the collection of OSSD and other sleep data via a 1-night, 9-hour polysomnography, which might not be representative of habitual sleep at home, the researchers noted. Other limitations include the lack of polysomnography data to accompany the young adult survey and the inability to validate insomnia in young adults via strict diagnostic criteria.
However, the results reveal that the persistence of childhood insomnia is higher than suggested in previous studies, and that these children and adolescents, especially short sleepers, are at significantly increased risk of adult insomnia, the researchers concluded.
“Early sleep interventions are a priority, as clinicians should not expect insomnia symptoms to developmentally remit in a high proportion of children, although objective sleep measures may be indicated in adolescence to identify those with poorer long-term prognosis,” they said.
Pandemic prompts interest in sleep issues
The current study is important at this time because sleep disruptions in children and adolescents have increased over the course of the COVID-19 pandemic, Karalyn Kinsella, MD, a pediatrician in private practice in Cheshire, Conn., said in an interview.
Dr. Kinsella said she was especially surprised to see that adolescent insomnia will most likely not remit in young adulthood, as she had considered it a disorder of adolescence.
The study highlights the need for early intervention to manage insomnia in children. However, there are several barriers to such intervention. “Parents [of young children] are overwhelmed and just need sleep themselves, so they don’t always have the energy to work on good sleep habits in their children,” she said. Improving sleep habits in adolescents requires overcoming the barrier of the young patients’ attitudes. “For adolescents, they need to buy into the change.”
However, the take-home message for clinicians is that it is important to work to overcome these barriers and improve sleep in children and teens, because the longitudinal data suggest that the problem is “likely to persist and unlikely to remit,” for many, she said.
As for additional studies, “I would like to see more research done on neurologic and psychological causes of insomnia,” Dr. Kinsella said.
The study was supported in part by grants from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; National Institute of Mental Health; and the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences of the National Institutes of Health. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose. Dr. Kinsella had no financial conflicts to disclose and serves on the editorial advisory board of Pediatric News.
Childhood-onset insomnia is a chronic problem in 43% of children, based on 15-year follow-up data from approximately 500 individuals.
Difficulty initiating or maintaining sleep (DIMS) is the most frequently reported insomnia symptom in children and teens, but longitudinal data on the trajectory of insomnia symptoms from childhood into adulthood are limited, Julio Fernandez-Mendoza, PhD, of Penn State University, Hershey, and colleagues wrote.
Previous studies have shown varying results, notably on the effect of objective short sleep duration (OSSD), they said. The extent to which the effect of OSSD on insomnia trajectories, and whether OSSD affects the development of insomnia in the transition to adulthood remains uncertain.
In a study published in Pediatrics, the researchers reviewed data from 502 children who enrolled at age 5-12 years between 2000 and 2005. The participants underwent laboratory polysomnography visits at baseline; 421 had a second laboratory visit between 2010 and 2013 (median age, 16 years), and 502 completed a structured self-reported survey between 2018 and 2021 at a median age of 24 years. At the first visit, 118 children met criteria for insomnia, defined as parent reports of often/moderate or very often/severe DIMS and/or use of over-the-counter or prescription sleep medications for DIMS. At the second visit, 120 children met the definition for insomnia.
Among children with insomnia symptoms at baseline, 53.7% had persistence of insomnia symptoms in adolescence and 61.9% had symptoms in young adulthood; 46.3% and 38.1% remitted at these times.
Among children with insomnia symptoms at adolescence, 57.5% and 42.5% had persistence and remittance, respectively, in young adulthood.
In children with insomnia at baseline, therefore, the most frequent developmental trajectory was persistence (43.3%) followed by remission (26.9% since childhood and 11.2% since adolescence) and a waxing and waning pattern (18.6%), the researchers said.
Among children with normal sleep at baseline, 69.7% retained normal sleep patterns in adolescence and 63.3% retained normal sleep in young adulthood; 30.3% and 36.7% developed insomnia in adolescence and young adulthood, respectively.
Overall, adult insomnia was reported by 22.0% and 20.8% of individuals with childhood and adolescent insomnia, respectively. In a multivariate analysis, the odds of adult insomnia were 2.6 times and 5.5 times higher among those with histories of short-sleeping in childhood and adolescence, respectively.
“The most common developmental trajectory for insomnia symptoms was that of persistence from childhood through young adulthood,” the researchers wrote in their discussion of the study.
“These 15-year longitudinal findings across three developmental stages indicate that insomnia symptoms should not be expected to developmentally remit in at least 40% of children and that adolescence is a critical developmental period for the adverse prognosis of the insomnia with short sleep duration phenotype,” they emphasized.
The study findings were limited by several factors including the collection of OSSD and other sleep data via a 1-night, 9-hour polysomnography, which might not be representative of habitual sleep at home, the researchers noted. Other limitations include the lack of polysomnography data to accompany the young adult survey and the inability to validate insomnia in young adults via strict diagnostic criteria.
However, the results reveal that the persistence of childhood insomnia is higher than suggested in previous studies, and that these children and adolescents, especially short sleepers, are at significantly increased risk of adult insomnia, the researchers concluded.
“Early sleep interventions are a priority, as clinicians should not expect insomnia symptoms to developmentally remit in a high proportion of children, although objective sleep measures may be indicated in adolescence to identify those with poorer long-term prognosis,” they said.
Pandemic prompts interest in sleep issues
The current study is important at this time because sleep disruptions in children and adolescents have increased over the course of the COVID-19 pandemic, Karalyn Kinsella, MD, a pediatrician in private practice in Cheshire, Conn., said in an interview.
Dr. Kinsella said she was especially surprised to see that adolescent insomnia will most likely not remit in young adulthood, as she had considered it a disorder of adolescence.
The study highlights the need for early intervention to manage insomnia in children. However, there are several barriers to such intervention. “Parents [of young children] are overwhelmed and just need sleep themselves, so they don’t always have the energy to work on good sleep habits in their children,” she said. Improving sleep habits in adolescents requires overcoming the barrier of the young patients’ attitudes. “For adolescents, they need to buy into the change.”
However, the take-home message for clinicians is that it is important to work to overcome these barriers and improve sleep in children and teens, because the longitudinal data suggest that the problem is “likely to persist and unlikely to remit,” for many, she said.
As for additional studies, “I would like to see more research done on neurologic and psychological causes of insomnia,” Dr. Kinsella said.
The study was supported in part by grants from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; National Institute of Mental Health; and the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences of the National Institutes of Health. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose. Dr. Kinsella had no financial conflicts to disclose and serves on the editorial advisory board of Pediatric News.
FROM PEDIATRICS