Department of Radiation Oncology, Department of Psychiatry, University of Rochester Medical Center, James P. Wilmot Cancer Center, 601 Elmwood Ave, Box 704, Rochester, New York, NY 14642, USA.
J Clin Oncol. 2010 Jan 10;28(2):292-8. doi: 10.1200/JCO.2009.22.5011. Epub 2009 Nov 23.
Sleep disruption is prevalent in patients with cancer and survivors, but the prevalence of insomnia, a distressing sleep disorder, in these populations has yet to be determined in large-scale studies.
A total of 823 patients with cancer receiving chemotherapy (mean age, 58 years; 597 female patients) reported on sleep difficulties in a prospective study.
During day 7 of cycle 1 of chemotherapy, 36.6% (n = 301) of the patients with cancer reported insomnia symptoms, and 43% (n = 362) met the diagnostic criteria for insomnia syndrome. Patients with cancer younger than 58 years were significantly more likely to experience either symptoms of insomnia or insomnia syndrome (chi(2) = 13.6; P = .0002). Patients with breast cancer had the highest number of overall insomnia complaints. A significant positive association was found between symptoms of insomnia during cycles 1 and 2 of chemotherapy (phi = .62, P < .0001), showing persistence of insomnia during the first two cycles of chemotherapy. Sixty percent of the patient sample reported that their insomnia symptoms remained unchanged from cycle 1 to cycle 2. Those with insomnia complaints had significantly more depression and fatigue than good sleepers (all P < .0001).
The proportions of patients with cancer in this sample reporting symptoms of insomnia and meeting diagnostic criteria for insomnia syndrome during chemotherapy are approximately three times higher than the proportions reported in the general population. Insomnia complaints persist throughout the second chemotherapy cycle for the majority of patients with cancer in this study. Insomnia is prevalent, underrecognized, undermanaged, and understudied among patients with cancer receiving chemotherapy.
癌症患者和幸存者普遍存在睡眠障碍,但在大规模研究中,尚未确定这些人群中令人痛苦的失眠症(一种睡眠障碍)的患病率。
在一项前瞻性研究中,823 名接受化疗的癌症患者(平均年龄 58 岁;597 名女性患者)报告了睡眠困难。
在化疗第 1 周期的第 7 天,36.6%(n=301)的癌症患者报告有失眠症状,43%(n=362)符合失眠症综合征的诊断标准。年龄小于 58 岁的癌症患者更有可能出现失眠症状或失眠症综合征(卡方=13.6;P=0.0002)。乳腺癌患者的总体失眠投诉最多。在化疗第 1 和第 2 周期期间,失眠症状之间存在显著的正相关关系(phi=0.62,P<0.0001),表明在化疗的前两个周期中失眠持续存在。60%的患者样本报告说,他们的失眠症状从第 1 周期到第 2 周期没有变化。有失眠投诉的患者比睡眠良好的患者抑郁和疲劳程度明显更高(均 P<0.0001)。
在这项研究中,报告在化疗期间出现失眠症状和符合失眠症综合征诊断标准的癌症患者比例约为一般人群报告比例的三倍。在这项研究中,大多数癌症患者的失眠症状在第二个化疗周期中持续存在。在接受化疗的癌症患者中,失眠症普遍存在,但未得到充分认识、管理和研究。