Department of Medical Social Sciences, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL, USA.
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Health, Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, Columbus, OH, USA.
Int J Behav Med. 2021 Feb;28(1):83-95. doi: 10.1007/s12529-020-09861-0.
Cancer-related sleep disturbance is common and can adversely affect physical and mental health. Bright light (BL) therapy is a novel intervention that targets sleep by promoting circadian regulation. Emerging evidence suggests BL can improve sleep disturbance, symptom burden, and health-related quality of life in cancer and other populations; however, this research is limited. The present two-phase pilot study assessed the feasibility and preliminary intended effects of BL therapy on sleep in ovarian and endometrial cancer survivors, and explored biologic and chronobiologic factors that may underlie intervention effects.
In phase I, focus groups were conducted with 12 survivors and 9 gynecologic oncology clinicians to evaluate and gather feedback about the proposed study. In phase II, a pilot randomized controlled trial was conducted with 18 ovarian or endometrial cancer survivors who were randomized 1:1 to receive 45 min of BL or dim light (DL) for 4 weeks. Participants wore wrist actigraphs; completed sleep diaries and self-report questionnaires; and provided blood, saliva, and urine samples at baseline (T1), post-intervention (T2), and 3-month follow-up (T3).
Study procedures were modified according to focus group results. Enrollment, retention, and adherence were all ≥ 80%. Mixed-model ANOVAs demonstrated that the number of nighttime awakenings per actigraphy, and sleep quality and depression per self-report, trended toward improvements in the BL condition compared to the DL condition. These variables improved from T1 to T2 before returning to baseline at T3. Effect sizes were generally medium to large.
Study findings suggest that BL therapy is feasible among ovarian and endometrial cancer survivors. It may be an effective, non-pharmacological approach to reduce sleep disturbance and symptom burden in this population.
癌症相关的睡眠障碍很常见,会对身心健康产生不利影响。亮光(BL)疗法是一种通过促进昼夜节律调节来改善睡眠的新干预措施。新出现的证据表明,BL 可以改善癌症和其他人群的睡眠障碍、症状负担和健康相关生活质量;然而,这项研究是有限的。本两项研究旨在评估 BL 治疗对卵巢和子宫内膜癌幸存者睡眠的可行性和初步效果,并探索可能影响干预效果的生物学和时间生物学因素。
在第一阶段,对 12 名幸存者和 9 名妇科肿瘤学临床医生进行了焦点小组讨论,以评估和收集关于拟议研究的反馈。在第二阶段,对 18 名卵巢或子宫内膜癌幸存者进行了一项试点随机对照试验,他们被随机分为 1:1 组,接受 45 分钟 BL 或暗灯(DL)治疗 4 周。参与者佩戴腕动图;完成睡眠日记和自我报告问卷;并在基线(T1)、干预后(T2)和 3 个月随访(T3)时提供血液、唾液和尿液样本。
根据焦点小组的结果修改了研究程序。入组、保留和依从性均≥80%。混合模型方差分析表明,与 DL 条件相比,BL 条件下每动图的夜间觉醒次数以及自我报告的睡眠质量和抑郁程度均呈改善趋势。这些变量在 T1 到 T2 期间有所改善,然后在 T3 时恢复到基线。效应大小通常为中到大。
研究结果表明,BL 治疗在卵巢和子宫内膜癌幸存者中是可行的。它可能是一种有效、非药物的方法,可减少该人群的睡眠障碍和症状负担。