Author:
Elia Clara,de Girolamo Laura,Clarisse Bénédicte,Galin Melvin,Rehel Stéphane,Clochon Patrice,Doidy Franck,Segobin Shailendra,Viader Fausto,Naveau Mikaël,Delcroix Nicolas,Segura-Djezzar Carine,Grellard Jean-Michel,Lequesne Justine,Etard Olivier,Martin Tristan,Quarck Gaëlle,Eustache Francis,Joly Florence,Giffard Bénédicte,Perrier Joy
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Many patients treated for breast cancer (BC) complain about cognitive difficulties affecting their daily lives. Recently, sleep disturbances and circadian rhythm disruptions have been brought to the fore as potential contributors to cognitive difficulties in patients with BC. Yet, studies on these factors as well as their neural correlates are scarce. The purpose of the ICANSLEEP-1 (Impact of SLEEP disturbances in CANcer) study is to characterize sleep using polysomnography and its relationship with the evolution of cognitive functioning at both the behavioral and the neuroanatomical levels across treatment in BC patients treated or not with adjuvant chemotherapy.
Methods
ICANSLEEP-1 is a longitudinal study including BC patients treated with adjuvant chemotherapy (n = 25) or not treated with adjuvant chemotherapy (n = 25) and healthy controls with no history of BC (n = 25) matched for age (45–65 years old) and education level. The evaluations will take place within 6 weeks after inclusion, before the initiation of chemotherapy (for BC patients who are candidates for chemotherapy) or before the first fraction of radiotherapy (for BC patients with no indication for chemotherapy) and 6 months later (corresponding to 2 weeks after the end of chemotherapy). Episodic memory, executive functions, psychological factors, and quality of life will be assessed with validated neuropsychological tests and self-questionnaires. Sleep quantity and quality will be assessed with polysomnography and circadian rhythms with both actigraphy and saliva cortisol. Grey and white matter volumes, as well as white matter microstructural integrity, will be compared across time between patients and controls and will serve to further investigate the relationship between sleep disturbances and cognitive decline.
Discussion
Our results will help patients and clinicians to better understand sleep disturbances in BC and their relationship with cognitive functioning across treatment. This will aid the identification of more appropriate sleep therapeutic approaches adapted to BC patients. Improving sleep in BC would eventually help limit cognitive deficits and thus improve quality of life during and after treatments.
Trial registration
NCT05414357, registered June 10, 2022.
Protocol version
Version 1.2 dated March 23, 2022.
Funder
Université de Caen Normandie
Région Normandie
Fondation ARC pour la Recherche sur le Cancer
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Cancer Research,Genetics,Oncology
Reference91 articles.
1. Ferlay J, Colombet M, Soerjomataram I, Parkin DM, Piñeros M, Znaor A, et al. Cancer statistics for the year 2020: An overview. Int J Cancer. 15 août 2021;149(4):778–89.
2. International Agency for Research on Cancer 2023, from https://gco.iarc.fr/today/online-analysis-multi-bars
3. Boykoff N, Moieni M, Subramanian SK. Confronting chemobrain: an in-depth look at survivors’ reports of impact on work, social networks, and health care response. J Cancer Surviv. 2009;3(4):223–32.
4. Lange M, Licaj I, Clarisse B, Humbert X, Grellard J, Tron L et al. Cognitive complaints in cancer survivors and expectations for support: Results from a web–based survey. Cancer Med. 18 mars 2019;8(5):2654–63.
5. Giffard B, Lange M, Léger I. Les troubles cognitifs légers liés Au cancer: comment Et à quelles fins les évaluer en consultation neuropsychologique ? Rev Neuropsychol. 2015;7(2):127.