Altman Brian J, Lin Po-Ju, Mattick Lindsey J, Outland Elliot H, Bautista Javier, Li Chin-Shang, Gada Umang, Morris Kristina M, Knudsen-Clark Amelia M, Mwangi Daniel, DeRollo Rachel E, Kleckner Amber S, Kleckner Ian R, Gilmore Nikesha J, Esparaz Benjamin T, Curtis Amarinthia, Conlin Alison, Monaco Gianni, Hughey Jacob J, Mustian Karen M
Department of Biomedical Genetics, University of Rochester Medical Center, Rochester, NY, USA.
Wilmot Cancer Institute, University of Rochester Medical Center, Rochester, NY, USA.
BJC Rep. 2025 Sep 3;3(1):60. doi: 10.1038/s44276-025-00176-9.
Insomnia is a toxicity of cancer and treatment for survivors without an objective biochemical measure. Circadian rhythms are 24-h cycles that influence physiologic processes including sleep, and disrupted rhythms may contribute to insomnia. Here, we use BloodCCD to assess circadian rhythms from RNA-sequencing of blood from cancer survivors with insomnia from the YOCAS-II trial. YOCAS-II aimed to determine whether YOCAS©® yoga or cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I) improved insomnia in survivors compared with a behavioral placebo. We hypothesized that circadian rhythms are disrupted in survivors, and that insomnia severity correlates with the degree of circadian disruption.
BloodCCD was developed to biochemically assess circadian rhythms in blood. It was adapted from the previously published Clock Correlation Distance (CCD) and uses a correlation matrix of 42 genes known to oscillate throughout the day in blood.
Cancer survivors had higher (worse) BloodCCD scores, indicating disrupted circadian clock, compared to healthy individuals. Furthermore, insomnia severity correlated with worse BloodCCD, and those in the YOCAS and behavioral placebo arm showed significant correlation between BloodCCD score and insomnia.
BloodCCD shows promise as a biomarker to biochemically detect disrupted circadian rhythms in cancer survivors, and as an indicator for insomnia severity.
NCT02613364.
失眠是癌症及其治疗对幸存者造成的一种不良影响,且尚无客观的生化检测方法。昼夜节律是影响包括睡眠在内的生理过程的24小时周期,节律紊乱可能导致失眠。在此,我们使用BloodCCD通过对参加YOCAS-II试验的失眠癌症幸存者的血液进行RNA测序来评估昼夜节律。YOCAS-II旨在确定与行为安慰剂相比,YOCAS®瑜伽或失眠认知行为疗法(CBT-I)是否能改善幸存者的失眠症状。我们假设幸存者的昼夜节律会被打乱,且失眠严重程度与昼夜节律紊乱程度相关。
BloodCCD用于从生化角度评估血液中的昼夜节律。它是在先前发表的时钟相关距离(CCD)基础上改编而来,使用已知在血液中全天振荡的42个基因的相关矩阵。
与健康个体相比,癌症幸存者的BloodCCD得分更高(更差),表明昼夜节律时钟被打乱。此外,失眠严重程度与更差的BloodCCD相关,且YOCAS组和行为安慰剂组的BloodCCD得分与失眠之间存在显著相关性。
BloodCCD有望作为一种生物标志物,用于生化检测癌症幸存者中被打乱的昼夜节律,并作为失眠严重程度的指标。
NCT02613364。