Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, 45 Francis St, Boston, MA, 02115, USA.
Division of Preventive Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA, USA.
Support Care Cancer. 2024 Jun 14;32(7):429. doi: 10.1007/s00520-024-08625-w.
Engagement in physical activity (PA) is often associated with better sleep quality and less pain severity among patients diagnosed with breast cancer. However, less research has focused on whether patients' PA prior to breast surgery, including their perceived decrease in PA level, is associated with worse preoperative sleep quality, and subsequently, greater postoperative pain. This longitudinal study investigated whether patients' preoperative PA was associated with their postoperative pain. We also explored whether preoperative sleep disturbance partially mediated the relationship between preoperative PA and postoperative pain.
Prior to breast surgery, patients self-reported both their overall level of PA and whether they perceived a decrease in their PA since the diagnosis/onset of treatment for cancer. Patients also completed a measure of preoperative sleep disturbance. Two weeks after surgery, patients completed a measure of postoperative surgical-area pain severity.
Our results showed that preoperatively perceiving a decrease in PA level was significantly associated with greater preoperative sleep disturbance and postoperative pain. A mediation analysis revealed that the association between preoperative decreased PA and postoperative pain was partially mediated by preoperative sleep disturbance. Notably, patients' overall preoperative level of PA was not related to preoperative sleep disturbance or postoperative pain.
These findings suggest that maintaining, or even increasing, PA after diagnosis/treatment may be more important than the absolute amount of PA that women engage in during the preoperative period. Potentially, some patients with breast cancer may benefit from a preoperative intervention focused on both maintaining PA and bolstering sleep quality.
身体活动(PA)的参与通常与乳腺癌患者更好的睡眠质量和更少的疼痛严重程度相关。然而,很少有研究关注患者在乳房手术前的 PA,包括他们感知到的 PA 水平下降,是否与术前睡眠质量较差,随后术后疼痛更大有关。这项纵向研究调查了患者术前 PA 是否与术后疼痛有关。我们还探讨了术前睡眠障碍是否部分中介了术前 PA 与术后疼痛之间的关系。
在乳房手术前,患者自我报告了他们的整体 PA 水平,以及他们是否认为自癌症诊断/开始治疗以来 PA 水平下降。患者还完成了一项术前睡眠障碍的测量。手术后两周,患者完成了一项术后手术区域疼痛严重程度的测量。
我们的结果表明,术前感知 PA 水平下降与术前睡眠障碍和术后疼痛更大显著相关。中介分析表明,术前减少 PA 与术后疼痛之间的关联部分由术前睡眠障碍介导。值得注意的是,患者术前整体 PA 水平与术前睡眠障碍或术后疼痛无关。
这些发现表明,在诊断/治疗后保持甚至增加 PA 可能比女性在术前期间参与的绝对 PA 量更为重要。患有乳腺癌的某些患者可能受益于一种专注于保持 PA 和提高睡眠质量的术前干预措施。