
We investigated sleep disturbances among cancer survivors compared to similarly aged women without cancer history.We identified 2067 women with a history of cancer other than breast or non-melanoma skin cancer at enrollment in the Sister Study, a US-wide cohort of women with a family history of breast cancer. Cancer survivors were matched with up to 5 cancer-free women (N = 9717) on age at enrollment. An index age (for covariate classification) was defined as the age at cancer diagnosis for survivors and the same age for their matched comparators. Sleep disturbances included duration, sleep medication usage, insomnia symptoms, long sleep-latency onset (≥30 min to fall asleep), frequent night awakenings (waking ≥3/night, ≥ 3 times/week), frequent napping (≥ 3 times/week), and a composite outcome of ≥ 1sleep disturbance. Multivariable linear regression (effect estimate, 95% confidence interval (CI)) and logistic regression (odds ratio, OR, 95% CI) were used for continuous and dichotomous outcomes, respectively.At enrollment, cancer survivors were on average 13.8 years (range=0, 62) from diagnosis. After adjustment for age at enrollment and depression, diabetes, hypertension, and menopausal status prior to the index age, sleep disturbances were generally not more common among cancer survivors compared to those without cancer. However, among cancer survivors, those > 2 years from diagnosis were more likely to report ≥ 1 sleep disturbance (OR=1.44; 1.07, 1.93) compared to survivors 0-2 years from diagnosis.Addressing sleep disturbances may improve well-being for cancer survivors.
Sleep Wake Disorders, Cancer Survivors, Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders, Humans, Female, Breast Neoplasms, Survivors, Sleep, Aged
Sleep Wake Disorders, Cancer Survivors, Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders, Humans, Female, Breast Neoplasms, Survivors, Sleep, Aged
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