Affiliation:
1. Department of Internal Medicine, Tribhuvan University Teaching Hospital
2. Central Hospital
3. BP Koirala Memorial Cancer Hospital, Bharatpur, Chitwan, Nepal
4. Curative Service Division, Department of Health Services, Ministry of Health and Population
5. Manmohan Memorial Institute of Health Sciences, Kathmandu
Abstract
Background:
Patients with advanced cancer are more susceptible to develop sleep disorders like insomnia, restlessness, hypersomnolence, and sleep apnea due to a series of stressful events and side effects of chemotherapeutic agents. Poor sleep quality is associated with bad cancer outcomes and substandard quality of life. The authors assessed the prevalence of sleep disorders among advanced cancer patients in a tertiary center in Nepal.
Methods:
Patients with stage three and four solid malignancies were enrolled from February 2023 to July 2023 to assess their sleep status. The data were collected using the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) questionnaire, analyzed using the Statistical Package for the Social Sciences (SPSS) version 27, and subgroup exploration was done to assess the relationship of poor sleep quality with gender, marital status, malignancy type, and treatment received. An ethical clearance was obtained from the Institutional Review Committee (IRC).
Results:
The authors evaluated data from 357 patients in the study. Of them, 58.3% were female and 41.7% were male. The mean age of the patients was 51.1 years. Among total cancer patients, 56% had significant sleep disorders. A significant association was observed between the quality of sleep and gender, type of malignancy, and treatment methods (p value <0.05). A majority of the patients demonstrated increased sleep latency, struggling to fall asleep swiftly.
Conclusions:
More than half of the patients had poor sleep, which has an adverse impact on the prognosis of the disease and quality of life of cancer patients. Therefore, this aspect of cancer management requires special consideration for better quality of life and appropriate end-of-life care.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Reference19 articles.
1. Sleep disturbances in advanced cancer patients admitted to a supportive/palliative care unit;Mercadante;Support Care Cancer,2017
2. Sleep disorders: causes, effects, and solutions;Tibbitts;Prim Care,2008
3. Assessment of sleep disturbance in lung cancer patients: relationship between sleep disturbance and pain, fatigue, quality of life, and psychological distress;Nishiura;Palliat Support Care,2015
4. Sleep dysfunction in patients with cancer;Fiorentino;Curr Treat Options Neurol,2007
5. Sleep quality in hospitalized patients with advanced cancer: an observational study using self-reports of sleep and actigraphy;Jakobsen;Support Care Cancer,2020