Comparison of subjectively and objectively measured sleep–wake patterns among patients with primary brain tumors

Author:

Kim Youngdeok1ORCID,Kenyon Jonathan1,Kim Jisu1,Willis Kelcie D2,Lanoye Autumn3,Loughan Ashlee R4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Kinesiology and Health Sciences, Virginia Commonwealth University , Richmond, Virginia , USA

2. Department of Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital , Boston, Massachusetts , USA

3. Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Hematology, Oncology, and Palliative Care, Virginia Commonwealth University , Richmond, Virginia , USA

4. Department of Neurology, Division of Neuro-Oncology, Virginia Commonwealth University , Richmond, Virginia , USA

Abstract

Abstract Background The sleep diary and wrist-worn actigraphy are widely used to assess sleep disturbances in patients with primary brain tumors (PwPBT) in both clinical and research settings. However, their comparability has not been systematically examined. This study aimed to compare the sleep–wake patterns measured using the subjectively measured Consensus Sleep Diary (CSD) and the objectively measured ActiGraph (AG) actigraphy among PwPBT. Methods Sleep–wake patterns were assessed through CSD and AG over 14 consecutive nights across 2 occasions among 30 PwPBT. AG data were processed with AG proprietary and open-source GGIR (GGIR-based approach without the aid of sleep log algorithms), both with and without the assistance of CSD. Thirteen sleep parameters covering sleep–wake times, sleep disruptions, sleep durations, and sleep efficiency were compared using equivalency testing, mean absolute percent error (MAPE), and intra-class correlation. The estimated sleep parameters were correlated with perceived sleep quality and compared across the different sleep measures. Results Significant between-measure equivalency was claimed for sleep–wake time parameters (P ≤ .05), with acceptable MAPEs (<10%). Sleep disruption parameters such as wake-after-sleep-onset were not statistically equivalent, with a large MAPE (≥10%) between the measures. Sleep efficiency was equivalent, though varied depending on how sleep efficiency was calculated. For most sleep parameters, ICCs were low and unacceptable (<0.50) suggesting incomparability between the measures. Lastly, CSD-derived sleep parameters exhibited a stronger correlation with perceived sleep quality compared to actigraphy measures. Conclusions The findings suggest the incomparability of sleep parameters estimated from different measures. Both subjective and objective measures are recommended to better describe sleep health among PwPBT.

Funder

Dana-Farber Harvard Cancer Center

NRG Oncology NCORP Cancer Prevention and Control

VCU Massey Cancer Center

National Cancer Institute of the National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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