Attenuated melanopsin-mediated post-illumination pupillary response (PIPR) is associated with reduced actigraphic amplitude and mesor in older adults

Sleep. 2024 Oct 9:zsae239. doi: 10.1093/sleep/zsae239. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Study objectives: This study aimed to explore the relationship between post-illumination pupillary response (PIPR) with sleep and circadian measures in a community sample of healthy older adults.

Methods: Eligible participants were invited to complete a one-week sleep diary, actigraphy and provide an overnight urine sample to measure urinary 6-sulfatoxymelatonin (aMT6s). PIPR was defined as the as the pupil constriction at 6s post-stimulus (PIPR-6s), and ii) for 30s beginning 10s after stimulus (PIPR-30s) normalized as a percentage to the baseline pupil diameter, after 1s of blue and 1s of red-light stimulus, respectively. The Net-PIPRs were reported by subtracting the PIPR to red stimulus from the PIPR to blue stimulus. The relationship between PIPR metrics to aMT6s and actigraphic rest-activity rhythm parameters was examined by generalized linear models.

Results: A total of 48 participants were recruited (Mean age: 62.6 ± 7.1 years, Male: 44%). Both Net PIPR-6s and Net PIPR-30s were significantly associated with actigraphic rest-activity amplitude (B=0.03, p=0.001 and B=0.03, p=0.01, respectively), and actigraphic rest-activity mesor (B=0.02, p=0.001 and B=0.03, p=0.004, respectively). Additionally, the Net PIPR-30s were positively associated with overnight aMT6s level (B=0.04, p=0.03), and negatively associated with actigraphic rest-activity acrophase (B=-0.01, p=0.004) in the fully adjusted models.

Conclusion: Attenuated PIPR is associated with a reduced actigraphic amplitude and mesor. The reduced retinal light responsivity may be a potential pathway contributing to impaired photic input to the circadian clock and resulted in the age-related circadian changes in older adults.

Keywords: PIPR; actigraphy; aging; circadian rhythms; post-illumination pupillary response.