Associations of autistic traits, sleep/circadian factors, and mental health

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Categoria Primary study
Pre-printmedRxiv
Year 2025
BackgroundAutistic individuals experience a heightened risk of depression and lower quality of life; however, it remains to be established whether disrupted sleep and circadian factors mediate this increased risk. ObjectivesWe assessed whether disruption of self-reported sleep and circadian factors mediate the associations of autistic traits with depression symptom severity and quality of life. Methods838 participants (mean: 52.8 [SD = 1.3] years, 70% females) from a large-scale observational survey (Netherlands Sleep Registry) completed the Autism Quotient Scale (AQ), Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale Cantril Ladder quality of life, Insomnia Severity Index, Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index, and the Munich Chronotype Questionnaire. Results\Higher autistic traits were associated with a trend for higher depression symptom severity (p = 0.06), significantly lower quality of life (p < 0.001), higher insomnia severity (p < 0.001), lower sleep quality (p < 0.001), a trend for late chronotype (r = 0.04, p = 0.06), but not social jetlag (r = 0.02, p = 0.21). Insomnia severity and chronotype partly mediated the association of autistic traits and depression symptom severity (standardized beta = -0.02, 95% CI = [-0.04, 0.00]), and the association of autistic traits and quality of life (standardized beta = -0.02, 95% CI = [-0.04, 0.00]). ConclusionAutistic traits were associated with depression severity and lower quality of life, mediated by insomnia symptom severity and chronotype. Future studies targeting insomnia complaints and late chronotype in this population may help alleviate their mental health complaints and increase quality of life.
Epistemonikos ID: 7346ae14295404f5bcb3c29481f025d941a565d2
First added on: Jun 13, 2025