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Elucidating the associations between sleep disturbance and depression,fatigue, and pain in older adults with cancer
Authors:Kah Poh Loh  Jason Zittel  Sindhuja Kadambi  Chintan Pandya  Huiwen Xu  Marie Flannery  Allison Magnuson  Javier Bautista  Colin McHugh  Karen Mustian  William Dale  Paul Duberstein  Supriya G. Mohile
Affiliation:1. James P Wilmot Cancer Institute, University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, United States;2. Department of Public Health Sciences, University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, United States;3. School of Nursing, University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, United States;4. Department of Medicine, Section of Geriatrics & Palliative Medicine, University of Chicago Medical Center, United States
Abstract:

Objectives

Sleep disturbance is prevalent and often coexists with depression, fatigue, and pain in the cancer population. The aim of this study was to describe the prevalence of sleep disturbance with co-existing depression, fatigue, and pain in older patients with cancer. We also examined the associations of several socio-demographic and clinical variables with sleep disturbance.

Methods

This cross-sectional study consisted of 389 older patients with solid and hematologic malignancies who were referred to the Specialized Oncology Care & Research in the Elderly (SOCARE) clinics at the Universities of Rochester and Chicago between May 2011 and October 2015 and completed a sleep and geriatric assessment (that inquires about fatigue, pain, and depression). Multivariate logistic regression was used to identify variables associated with sleep disturbance.

Results

The prevalence of sleep disturbance was 40%. Of those with sleep disturbance (n?=?154), 84% also had at least one of the other three symptoms (25% had one symptom, 38% had two symptoms, and 21% had three symptoms). Sleep disturbance was more likely to be reported in those with comorbidities (45% vs. 28%, P?=?0.002), depression (49% vs. 36%, P?=?0.015), fatigue (49% vs. 23%, P?

Conclusions

Sleep disturbance is prevalent and often co-occurs with depression, fatigue, or pain in older patients with cancer. Fatigue was significantly associated with sleep disturbance and future studies should explore interventions that target sleep disturbance and fatigue.
Keywords:Sleep disturbance  Depression  Pain  Older adults  Cancer
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