Sleep and cancer mortality in the Cancer Prevention Study-II.

IF 2.2 4区 医学 Q3 ONCOLOGY
Cancer Causes & Control Pub Date : 2024-12-01 Epub Date: 2024-09-06 DOI:10.1007/s10552-024-01910-3
Sidney M Donzella, Emily Deubler, Alpa V Patel, Amanda I Phipps, Charlie Zhong
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Purpose: Sleep is a multi-dimensional human function that is associated with cancer outcomes. Previous work on sleep and cancer mortality have not investigated how this relationship varies by sex and cancer site. We investigated the association of sleep duration and perceived insomnia with site-specific and overall cancer mortality among participants in the Cancer Prevention Study-II.

Methods: Sleep was collected at baseline in 1982 among 1.2 million cancer-free US adults. Cancer-specific mortality was determined through 2018. We used multivariable Cox proportional hazard models to calculate hazard ratios and 95% confidence intervals for overall and site-specific cancer mortality, stratified by sex.

Results: Among 983,105 participants (56% female) followed for a median of 27.9 person-years, there were 146,911 primary cancer deaths. Results from the adjusted model showed short (6 h/night) and long (8 h/night and 9-14 h/night) sleep duration, compared to 7 h/night, were associated with a modest 2%, 2%, and 5% higher risk of overall cancer mortality, respectively, and there was a significant non-linear trend (p-trend < 0.01). This non-linear trend was statistically significant among male (p-trend < 0.001) but not female (p-trend 0.71) participants. For male participants, short and long sleep were associated with higher risk of lung cancer mortality and long sleep was associated with higher risk of colorectal cancer mortality. Perceived insomnia was associated with a 3-7% lower risk of overall cancer mortality.

Conclusion: Sleep is important to consider in relation to sex- and site-specific cancer mortality. Future research should investigate other components of sleep in relation to cancer mortality.

Abstract Image

癌症预防研究-II》中的睡眠与癌症死亡率。
目的:睡眠是一项多维度的人体功能,与癌症的预后有关。以往有关睡眠和癌症死亡率的研究并未调查这种关系如何因性别和癌症部位而异。我们在癌症预防研究-II 的参与者中调查了睡眠时间和感知失眠与特定部位和总体癌症死亡率的关系:方法:1982 年,我们对 120 万未罹患癌症的美国成年人进行了睡眠基线收集。癌症特异性死亡率的测定一直持续到 2018 年。我们使用多变量 Cox 比例危险模型计算了按性别分层的总体和部位特异性癌症死亡率的危险比和 95% 置信区间:983105名参与者(56%为女性)的随访时间中位数为27.9人年,其中146911人死于原发性癌症。调整后的模型结果显示,与7小时/晚相比,睡眠时间短(6小时/晚)和长(8小时/晚和9-14小时/晚)分别与癌症总死亡率略高2%、2%和5%的风险有关,且存在显著的非线性趋势(P-趋势 结论:睡眠与癌症的关系非常重要:睡眠与特定性别和特定部位的癌症死亡率有重要关系。未来的研究应调查与癌症死亡率相关的其他睡眠因素。
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来源期刊
Cancer Causes & Control
Cancer Causes & Control 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
3.90
自引率
4.30%
发文量
130
审稿时长
6.6 months
期刊介绍: Cancer Causes & Control is an international refereed journal that both reports and stimulates new avenues of investigation into the causes, control, and subsequent prevention of cancer. By drawing together related information published currently in a diverse range of biological and medical journals, it has a multidisciplinary and multinational approach. The scope of the journal includes: variation in cancer distribution within and between populations; factors associated with cancer risk; preventive and therapeutic interventions on a population scale; economic, demographic, and health-policy implications of cancer; and related methodological issues. The emphasis is on speed of publication. The journal will normally publish within 30 to 60 days of acceptance of manuscripts. Cancer Causes & Control publishes Original Articles, Reviews, Commentaries, Opinions, Short Communications and Letters to the Editor which will have direct relevance to researchers and practitioners working in epidemiology, medical statistics, cancer biology, health education, medical economics and related fields. The journal also contains significant information for government agencies concerned with cancer research, control and policy.
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