Abstract
Circadian medicine aims to leverage the body’s internal clock to develop safer and more effective therapeutics. Traditionally, biological time has been estimated using dim light melatonin onset (DLMO), a method that requires collecting saliva samples over a long period under controlled conditions, to ensure the observation of DLMO, making it time-consuming and labor-intensive. While some studies have mitigated this by reducing the length of the sampling window, they significantly failed to identify the DLMO for shift workers. In this study, we present a framework that reduces the DLMO experiment time for shift workers to just 5 h. This approach combines sleep-wake pattern data from wearable devices with a mathematical model to predict DLMO prospectively. Based on this prediction, we define a targeted 5-h sampling window, from 3 h before to 2 h after the estimated DLMO. Testing this framework with 19 shift workers, we successfully identified the DLMO for all participants, whereas traditional methods failed for more than 40% of participants. This approach significantly reduces the experiment time required for measuring the DLMO of shift workers from 24 h to 5 h, simplifying the circadian phase measurements for shift workers.
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