Abstract

IntroductionCigarette smokers are at increased risk of poor sleep behaviors. However, it is largely unknown whether these associations are due to shared (genetic) risk factors and/or causal effects (which may be bidirectional).MethodsWe obtained summary-level data of genome-wide association studies of smoking (smoking initiation [n = 74 035], cigarettes per day [n = 38 181], and smoking cessation [n = 41 278]) and sleep behaviors (sleep duration and chronotype, or “morningness” [n = 128 266] and insomnia [n = 113 006]). Using linkage disequilibrium (LD) score regression, we calculated genetic correlations between smoking and sleep behaviors. To investigate causal effects, we employed Mendelian randomization (MR), both with summary-level data and individual-level data (n = 333 581 UK Biobank participants). For MR with summary-level data, individual genetic variants were combined with inverse variance–weighted meta-analysis, weighted median regression, MR-Robust Adjusted Profile Score, and MR Egger methods.ResultsWe found negative genetic correlations between smoking initiation and sleep duration (rg = −.14, 95% CI = −0.26 to −0.01) and smoking cessation and chronotype (rg = −.18, 95% CI = −0.31 to −0.06), and positive genetic correlations between smoking initiation and insomnia (rg = .27, 95% CI = 0.06 to 0.49) and cigarettes per day and insomnia (rg = .15, 95% CI = 0.01 to 0.28). MR provided strong evidence that smoking more cigarettes causally decreases the odds of being a morning person, (RAPS) and weak evidence that insomnia causally increases smoking heaviness and decreases smoking cessation odds.ConclusionsSmoking and sleep behaviors show moderate genetic correlation. Heavier smoking seems to causally affect circadian rhythm and there is some indication that insomnia increases smoking heaviness and hampers cessation. Our findings point to sleep as a potentially interesting smoking treatment target.ImplicationsUsing LD score regression, we found evidence that smoking and different sleep behaviors (sleep duration, chronotype (morningness), and insomnia) are moderately genetically correlated—genetic variants associated with less or poorer sleep also increased the odds of smoking (more heavily). MR analyses suggested that heavier smoking causally affects circadian rhythm (decreasing the odds of being a morning person) and there was some indication that insomnia increases smoking heaviness and hampers smoking cessation. Our findings indicate a complex, bidirectional relationship between smoking and sleep behaviors and point to sleep as a potentially interesting smoking treatment target.

Highlights

  • Cigarette smokers are at increased risk of poor sleep behaviors

  • Implications: Using linkage disequilibrium (LD) score regression, we found evidence that smoking and different sleep behaviors (sleep duration, chronotype, and insomnia) are moderately genetically correlated—genetic variants associated with less or poorer sleep increased the odds of smoking

  • We observed a negative correlation between sleep duration and smoking initiation and, in agreement with this, a positive genetic correlation between undersleeping and smoking initiation

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Summary

Introduction

Cigarette smokers are at increased risk of poor sleep behaviors. it is largely unknown whether these associations are due to shared (genetic) risk factors and/or causal effects (which may be bidirectional). Implications: Using LD score regression, we found evidence that smoking and different sleep behaviors (sleep duration, chronotype (morningness), and insomnia) are moderately genetically correlated—genetic variants associated with less or poorer sleep increased the odds of smoking (more heavily). Smokers take a longer time to fall asleep and are at higher risk of experiencing sleep disturbances.[1] sleep duration is generally shorter in smokers, longer than average sleep duration is more common too.[2,3] One longitudinal study that followed substance naïve adolescents into early adulthood found that erratic sleep patterns predicted smoking initiation.[4] In adults, transitioning from “adequate” to “inadequate” sleep duration over a period of 5 years predicted heavier smoking[5] and preexisting insomnia symptoms increased the likelihood of relapse after an attempt to quit smoking.[6] Chronotype— being a “morning” versus an “evening” person—has been linked to smoking such that smokers are more likely to be an evening person.[7] This is in contrast to evidence suggesting that young adolescents with an evening chronotype show a lower odds of smoking initiation 4–5 years later.[4] The observational nature of the studies described here precludes strong conclusions about causality. Unraveling the nature of the relationship between smoking and poor sleep is important, given the major health burden that both behaviors pose.[8,9]

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