Article Text
Abstract
Objective To investigate longitudinal sleep patterns in children with autistic spectrum disorders (ASDs).
Study design Prospective longitudinal study using Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children, an English cohort born in 1991–1992. Parental reports of sleep duration were collected by questionnaires at 8 time points from 6 months to 11 years. Children with an ASD diagnosis at age 11 years (n=73) were identified from health and education records.
Results From aged 30 months to 11 years old, children with ASD slept for 17–43 min less each day than contemporary controls. No significant difference in total sleep duration was found in infancy, but from 30 months of age children with ASD slept less than their peers, a difference that remained significant after adjusting for sex, ethnicity, high parity and epilepsy. The reduction in total sleep was wholly due to changes in night rather than daytime sleep duration. Night-time sleep duration was shortened by later bedtimes and earlier waking times. Frequent waking (3 or more times a night) was also evident among the children with ASD from 30 months of age. Age-specific decreases of >1SD within individuals in sleep duration across adjacent time points was a predictor of ASD between 18 months and 30 months of age (p=0.04) and from 30 months to 42 months (p=0.02).
Conclusions Sleep duration in children with ASD is reduced from 30 months of age and persists until adolescence.
- Autism
- Sleep
- Neurodevelopment
- ALSPAC
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What is already known on this topic
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Children with autistic spectrum disorders (ASDs) are recognised to be more likely to have disturbed sleep than typically developing children.
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Most research studies of sleep in ASD are cross-sectional, and many are limited by small sample sizes and retrospective recall of sleeping patterns.
What this study adds
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Using prospectively collected data, total sleep duration in children with autistic spectrum disorders (ASDs) was reduced compared with peers from 30 months of age and persisted until adolescence.
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Children with ASD showed a reduction in night-time sleep, to a maximum of 43 min at 81 months, and more frequent waking at night.
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Changes in sleeping patterns in ASD were most pronounced between 18 months and 42 months of age.
Introduction
Autistic spectrum disorders (ASDs) are lifelong pervasive developmental disorders characterised by delayed and disordered communication skills, impaired social interaction and repetitive and restrictive patterns of behaviour.1 A wide range of comorbidities and concurrent disorders are recognised to be associated with ASD,2 including sleep disorders.3
Children with ASD are more likely to have disturbed sleep than typically developing children and those with other developmental disabilities: a recent report based on parental questionnaires suggested a 53% prevalence of sleep disturbance in children with ASD aged 2–5 years old compared with 46% in children with developmental delay and 32% in typically developing children.4 The most commonly reported sleep disturbances are increased sleep latency and frequent night waking which result in reduced sleep duration.5 ,6 Other problems reported by parents include early morning waking, lack of sleep routine, nightmares and reduced sleep duration.7 ,8 The aetiology of sleep disorders in ASD is poorly understood and is likely due to multiple complex interactions between biological, psychosocial, behavioural and environmental factors.6
Sleep disorders are important to identify in this population as they may have a negative impact on daytime behaviour,3 ,9 have been linked to increased autistic symptoms,10 and have the potential to be treated with behavioural programmes and pharmacological interventions such as melatonin.11
Sleep habits in ASD have been examined using sleep questionnaires,4 ,12 as well as more objective sleep studies including actigraphy and polysomnography.9 However, most research studies are cross-sectional and many are limited by small sample size, retrospective recall of sleeping patterns, lack of agreed definitions of sleep disorders and mixed comparison groups.
We have used a large British longitudinal study to examine the sleeping patterns of children with ASD compared with a large cohort of typically developing healthy children from infancy to 11 years of age.
Methods
Sample
The Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC) is a longitudinal cohort study following the health and development of children who had an expected date of delivery between April 1991 and December 1992, and were resident in the Avon area of south-west England at the time of their birth.13 A total of 14 541 mothers were enrolled in pregnancy, resulting in a cohort of 14 062 children. The Avon area had a population broadly typical of England in the 1991 census, with a mixture of rural and urban communities. Full details are available on the ALSPAC website: http://www.bristol.ac.uk/alspac.14 Ethical approval for the study was obtained from the ALSPAC Law and Ethics Committee and the Local Research Ethics Committees.
Identification of cases of ASD
The children within ALSPAC with a diagnosis of ASD by age 11 years were identified from two independent sources: (a) the clinical records of all children in the cohort investigated for a suspected developmental disorder by a multidisciplinary assessment (b) the national educational database in England (Pupil Level Annual Schools Census) which identified all children in state schools (over 90% of children) needing special educational provision in 2003. A total of 86 children were identified from both sources: 30 children with classical childhood autism, 15 with atypical autism and 23 with Asperger's syndrome: 18 of the ASD cases from the educational database could not be classified, as they were not subject to a multidisciplinary assessment. Median age at diagnosis ranged from 45 months in childhood autism to 116 months in Asperger's syndrome. Details of the methods used in the identification of ASD in the ALSPAC cohort have previously been reported.15
Sleep data
Parental questionnaires at 6 months, 18 months, 30 months, 42 months, 69 months, 81 months, 115 months and 140 months of age asked detailed questions about children's sleep patterns. A more detailed account of the sleep data methodology and analysis has recently been published.16 The questions included what time (to the nearest minute) the infant or child ‘normally’ went to bed in the evening and woke in the morning on an average weekday; from this response, night-time sleep duration was calculated, along with a categorical approximation of daytime sleep (none, <1 h, 1–2 h, >2 h, from which estimates of 0, 0.5, 1.5 and 2.5, respectively, were used). Total daily sleep duration (unrounded) was derived from these data. Previous analysis16 has shown reduced sleep duration across all time points for boys (5–10 min), for children of non-white ethnicity (5–20 min) and for children with three or more siblings (5–15 min).
Parents were asked about the number of times the infant or child woke during the night for the first seven time points (6–115 months, inclusive). Night-time waking events were categorised into none, 1, 2 or 3 or more. Frequent waking for this analysis was defined as an infant or child waking three or more times during the night-time sleep. The questionnaires used can be accessed on the ALSPAC website in a searchable database.17
Social Communication Disorders Checklist
The Social Communication Disorders Checklist (SCDC)18 is a 12-item parental questionnaire that measures social skills and verbal/non-verbal characteristics typical of those found in ASD. This questionnaire has been evaluated as a screening tool for autism and found to predict autism with a sensitivity of 0.9 and specificity of 0.69.18 The SCDC was administered by parental questionnaire to the ALSPAC cohort at age 7 years, and scores resulted in a continuous variable, with boys having mean scores 30% higher than girls.19 As a secondary analysis, we investigated whether social communication difficulties (above the clinical cut-off of 9 on the SCDC) correlated with sleeping patterns.
Cognitive and educational data
The ALSPAC database includes an IQ measured at 7 years using a short version of the Weschler Intelligence Scale for Children 3rd edition (WISC-III), and data from Standardized Assessment Test results obtained from Local Education Authorities in England. These tests are compulsory for children in state funded schools in England, but are optional for independent private schools. Key Stage One (KS1) comprises years 1–2 at primary school (ages 5–7 years) and includes compulsory national tests at 7 years of age in reading, writing and mathematics. Educational attainment in Standardized Assessment Tests is categorised into National Curriculum Levels 1–8. At KS1, children are expected to achieve scores of level 2 or above. KS1 scores of 0 or level 1 were used to identify children with learning difficulties.
Statistical analysis
Data manipulation and analysis was performed using STATA V.11 and SPSS V.16. Sleep duration was normally distributed at all time points, and means and SDs were used to describe the (unrounded) data. Comparisons between continuous distributions were made using the t test, whereas for categorical data, the χ2 test was used (for expected cells <5, the Fisher's exact test was used).
Sleep variables for ASD cases were compared with the rest of the cohort, using multivariable logistic regression modelling controlling for factors previously found to be significantly associated with ASD in the ALSPAC cohort.15 A forward stepwise regression model was implemented, and tests for interaction were used for analysis of KS1 educational data. The final model adjusted for sex, ethnicity, high parity (four or more children in a family) and comorbid epilepsy. A similar analysis was performed using children with a SCDC score of 9 or above (the clinical cut-off), to assess the correlation of altered sleep habits with social communication traits.
Centiles were constructed by using the mean and SD at each time point. Rates of falls in sleep duration in individuals with ASD and controls were then calculated by considering the proportion of children at each time point with a substantially decreased sleep duration (set at 1 SD or more).
Results
Sample size and attrition
Sleep duration data were available for a maximum of 73 ASD cases and 10 704 controls at 18 months, but numbers, as expected, fell over time due to attrition from the cohort. By 140 months (11 years) sleep data were available on 39 children with ASD and from 7043 controls in the rest of the cohort. Children attending research clinics and those with returned questionnaires were more likely to come from families of higher socioeconomic class, with higher maternal educational level and secure housing tenure (p≤0.01 for all).
Total sleep duration
Prior to 30 months, no significant difference in sleep duration was found: from 30 months, children with ASD showed a trend towards reduced total sleep duration which continued throughout childhood (table 1). The difference in total sleep duration remained significant at 140 months of age; the difference was greatest (43 min) at 81 months (p=<0.0001), reducing to 20 min at 140 months of age (p=0.001) (see figure 1).
These differences in total sleep duration remained very similar in a multivariable linear regression model, adjusting for sex, ethnicity, high parity and epilepsy. Male gender was the most influential factor in the regression model. Prematurity, low birth weight, maternal education, paternal social class and sleep-disordered breathing were all tested at the univariable level but were not significantly associated with sleep duration in ASD.
Differences in total sleep duration were wholly due to a reduction in night-time sleep duration (see figure 2). Night-time sleep duration was influenced by differences in bedtime and wake time (presented in table 1). Daytime sleep duration was not significantly different between the two groups (see figure 3).
IQ scores were only available for 21 children with ASD in the cohort, so educational attainment (KS1 scores) were used as a proxy for learning disability. KS1 data were available for 62 of the children with ASD and over 11 000 children in the rest of the cohort. Thirty-seven per cent of children with ASD had a score of 0 or 1, compared with 3% of the rest of the cohort (p=0.0001). However, no consistent difference was found in total sleep duration between ASD cases with and without learning disability.
Total sleep duration was analysed in children with high SCDC scores (>9), and compared with the rest of the cohort. The trend of reduced sleep duration in children with social communication difficulties was consistent with that found in the ASD cases, although was not as pronounced, and was statistically significant from 42 months to 140 months of age (p<0.01).
Night-time waking
Children with ASD woke more frequently at night. Frequent waking (defined as three or more times a night) was statistically significant from 30 months of age, with 13% of children with ASD waking more than three times a night compared with 5% of the cohort (see table 2). This difference became more pronounced with age, 11% of children with ASD waking more than three times a night at 81 months compared with only 0.5% of the rest of the cohort.
Tracking changes in sleep duration across sleep centiles
Comparing children who decreased sleep duration between two consecutive time points by more than 1 SD, there was a greater proportion of children with ASD at most intervals, although this was only statistically significant at 30 months (p=0.04) and 42 months (p=0.004). From 18 months to 42 months night-time sleep duration fell by a further hour in ASD cases compared with controls. These differences remained statistically significant when controlling for confounders (p=0.045 and 0.02 respectively).
Discussion
This longitudinal prospective study demonstrated that children with ASD had reduced total sleep duration when compared with contemporary controls, from 30 months to early adolescence. The differences were primarily during night-time sleep, and the individual changes in sleep pattern were most pronounced between 18 months and 42 months.
The strength of this study is that it is the first longitudinal description of reduced sleep duration and night waking in children with ASD using prospectively collected data, reported by the parents before their child was diagnosed with an ASD. The main limitation is the missing data due to attrition, which was more marked among the children with ASD and among children from poorer backgrounds. The ASD prevalence at 11 years in ALSPAC was lower than previously reported in England,20 and it is probable that some higher functioning children on the autistic spectrum were not included as they had not been diagnosed by age 11 years.
A second limitation of this study is the estimation of sleep duration by parental report only, without actigraphy or polysomnography. Actigraphy would have been the only possible objective proxy measurement for sleep in such a large cohort, but has drawbacks such as it may interpret restless sleep as being awake.21 In children with ASD actigraphy is often poorly tolerated: Souders et al9 compared 59 children with ASD with 40 control subjects using a variety of subjective and objective sleep measures, including actigraphy, and found that the subjective and objective measures yielded very similar estimates of the rate of sleep disturbances in their ASD cohort.
Studies have generally demonstrated parental reports to be in keeping with or to be an underestimation of sleep disturbances in children,22 although some research has suggested that parents over-report sleep problems.23 Total sleep duration was derived from parental reports of estimated bedtime, wake-time and daytime naps. An estimated bedtime did not differentiate between when the child goes to bed and goes to sleep, and therefore did not account for sleep latency. Also night-time sleep duration did not take into account duration of waking events, reported to be frequent in the population with ASD. The narrowing of the reported difference between ASD and controls in duration of sleep as children get older may be because older children with ASD learn to stay in bed when they wake, and are less demanding of parental attention at night.
The large variation in sleep duration in children in the ALSPAC cohort,16 also reported in US children and adolescents,24 suggests that the difference in total sleep seen in ASD may be of modest clinical importance, as it lies within the wide normal CIs. Although disturbed sleep is linked to poor daytime behaviour and family distress,23 we can only speculate whether the size of this reduction in sleep duration in children with ASD had an impact on development, intellectual functioning and autistic behaviours.
In experimental models sleep loss has an impact on daytime learning and behaviour, although the size of this impact is unclear and inconsistent.25 At a neurobiological level, some researchers speculate that sleep loss may cause actual neuronal loss.26 If this hypothesis of cumulative sleep reduction resulting in neuronal loss is confirmed, then clinically the ASD population might gain from even a small consistent increase in total sleep time.
Sleep duration in childhood decreases over time.16 ,24 When we took this into account by normalising the distribution at each time point we showed marked differences between the children with ASD and the rest of the cohort between ages 18 months and 42 months. Using ALSPAC, we reported a similar but later pattern in the development of sleep patterns in attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, with the biggest difference in sleep duration between attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and controls seen from 42 months to 69 months.27
Although we could not show any difference between children with ASD with and without learning difficulties, disturbed sleep patterns in ASD do appear to be different from those seen in children with intellectual disabilities.28 ,29 We speculate that such widespread and early effects on sleep duration reflect an underlying shared neuropathological basis between autism and disturbances of the biological clock.29 ,30 There are increasing biochemical and genetic data to support the existence of fundamental disturbances in circadian melatonin production in some children with autism, which may partly explain these findings. Children with ASD are reported to have reduced levels of circulating melatonin and disrupted circadian rhythms, and links have been identified between genes involved in melatonin synthesis and ASD,31 which could help explain the disturbed sleep patterns observed in children with ASD. An increasing body of evidence from trials32 demonstrates that oral melatonin can reduce sleep latency11 ,32 and increase sleep duration33 in ASD.
In conclusion, this research emphasises the importance of assessing sleep disturbances early in children with ASD, to offer support and anticipatory guidance to parents and to consider the use of melatonin to reduce sleep latency.
Acknowledgments
We are extremely grateful to all the families who took part in this study, the midwives for their help in recruiting them and the whole ALSPAC team, which includes interviewers, computer and laboratory technicians, clerical workers, research scientists, volunteers, managers, receptionists and nurses. The UK Medical Research Council (Grant ref: 74882) the Wellcome Trust (Grant ref: 076467) and the University of Bristol provide core support for ALSPAC.
References
Supplementary materials
Press release
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Footnotes
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Contributors JSH undertook the analyses under supervision, interpreted the findings, contributed to earlier versions of the paper and approved the final version of the manuscript for publication. PG obtained the funding for the analysis, contributed to study design and data interpretation, edited early drafts and approved the final version of the manuscript for publication. PSB undertook most of the analyses of sleep data in ALSPAC and supervised JSH on this project. He contributed to data interpretation and approved the final version of the manuscript for publication. NS contributed to study design and data interpretation and approved the final version of the manuscript for publication. JH contributed to study design and data interpretation, edited early drafts and approved the final version of the manuscript for publication. PJF designed the ALSPAC sleep questions, contributed to study design and data interpretation and approved the final version of the manuscript for publication. AME identified autistic spectrum disorders in ALSPAC, oversaw study design and data interpretation, wrote the first draft of the paper and approved the final version of the manuscript for publication.
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Funding Guy's and St Thomas’ Charity (Grant ref: S091017) helped support PSB to undertake specific statistical analysis on ALSPAC sleep data.
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Competing interests None.
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Ethics approval ALSPAC Law and Ethics Committee and the Bristol Local Research Ethics Committees.
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Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.
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Data sharing statement ALSPAC has well-developed methods to support the sharing of data, and strict policies to ensure confidentiality of participants. Details on ALSPAC's data sharing policy can been found at www.bristol.ac.uk/alspac/sci-com/collab-policy/.