Your search

In authors or contributors
  • Sleep disturbances are prevalent in substance use disorders (SUDs). Objective (e.g., polysomnography) and subjective (e.g., Pittsburgh sleep quality index [PSQI]) assessments are commonly used, with polysomnography enabling sleep architecture analysis and diagnosis of sleep disorders, but its use limited by logistical constraints. Actigraphy offers a feasible alternative for longitudinal and naturalistic assessment. We aimed to synthesize actigraphy-based sleep outcomes in individuals with SUDs and compare them with subjective sleep measures. We conducted a meta-analysis (PROSPERO: CRD420251072028), searching 8 databases by March, 2026. Studies included adults with SUDs reporting actigraphy-based parameters and/or subjective sleep outcomes. Nine studies (n = 1366) met inclusion criteria. Actigraphy showed reduced total sleep time in alcohol use disorder (AUD) (mean difference [MD] = −44.67; 95%CI: −56.10 to −33.24) and opioid use disorder (MD = −40.00, 95%CI = −72.08 to −7.92), and increased wake after sleep onset in nicotine use disorder (MD = 6.60; 95%CI: 2.41−10.80). Subjective data indicated poorer sleep quality in AUD (PSQI MD = 4.37; 95%CI: 1.28−7.47). Available evidence suggests consistent objective and subjective sleep disturbances in AUD and general concordance between actigraphy- and polysomnography-derived sleep parameters. Actigraphy appears to be a feasible objective tool for sleep assessment in SUDs, though additional studies across diverse substances are needed. © 2026

Last update from database: 5/15/26, 4:15 PM (UTC)

Explore

Department

Resource type

Resource language