Abstract

ObjectivesTo prospectively investigate the associations of longitudinal changes in sleep score and LTPA and their combination with all-cause mortality. MethodsAmong 12,543 participants (mean age: 66.1 years) from the Dongfeng-Tongji cohort, we calculated sleep score (range, 0–4, integrating bedtime, sleep duration, sleep quality, and midday napping, higher score indicating healthier sleep) and LTPA at baseline (2008–2010) and the first follow-up (2013) surveys and their 5-year changes (defining stable sleep score as no change and stable LTPA as change within 150 min/week). We prospectively documented deaths from the first follow-up survey (2013) through December 31, 2018. ResultsDuring a mean 5.5-year follow-up, 792 deaths occurred. The 5-year changes in sleep score and LTPA were inversely associated with all-cause mortality risk, regardless of their initial values. When assessing 5-year changes in sleep score and LTPA jointly, compared with the stable sleep score-stable LTPA group, the decreased sleep score-decreased LTPA group had a 40 % (5–85 %) higher all-cause mortality risk, whereas the increased sleep score-increased LTPA group had a 34 % (9–52 %) lower risk. The direction of the joint association was mainly driven by sleep score change. Participants maintaining sleep scores ≥ 3 and LTPA ≥ 150 min/week over 5 years had a 44 % (28–56 %) lower all-cause mortality risk. ConclusionsPromoting sleep hygiene and LTPA together may benefit efforts in reducing mortality risk, with particular attention to monitoring long-term sleep health.

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