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Turkish Journal of Medical Sciences

Abstract

Background/aim: Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is often accompanied by fatigue and sleep disturbances, which aggravate disease severity. Gender differences in these interrelationships remain insufficiently understood. This study aimed to examine whether fatigue mediates the association between sleep quality and disease severity in RA, and whether these pathways differ by gender.

Materials and methods: A single-center study was conducted with 68 RA patients (55.9% female). Disease severity was assessed using the Routine Assessment of Patient Index Data-3, fatigue using the Bristol Rheumatology Fatigue Multidimensional Questionnaire, and sleep quality using the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI).

Results: Fatigue significantly mediated the relationship between poor sleep quality and disease severity (indirect effect β = 0.209, p = 0.003). While gender significantly predicted fatigue (β = 0.297, p = 0.005) and females reported higher fatigue and disease severity, gender did not significantly moderate the mediation pathway (PSQI × gender interaction β = 0.019, p = 0.856). The direct effect of sleep quality on disease severity was not significant (β = 0.047, p = 0.663), supporting a full mediation model. Menopausal status was not significantly related to symptom variation among women with RA.

Conclusion: Fatigue is a key mechanism connecting poor sleep to greater disease severity in RA. The female participants reported greater symptom burden, underscoring the importance of fatigue-focused, gender-sensitive management strategies.

Author ORCID Identifier

MUSA SALMANOĞLU: 0000-0002-5050-531X

HABİP YILMAZ: 0000-0002-5138-3940

DOI

10.55730/1300-0144.6113

Keywords

disease severity, fatigue, gender differences, Rheumatoid arthritis, sleep quality

First Page

1552

Last Page

1560

Publisher

The Scientific and Technological Research Council of Türkiye (TÜBİTAK)

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

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