PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

Evidence of associations between cytokine genes and subjective reports of sleep disturbance in oncology patients and their family caregivers.

  • Christine Miaskowski,
  • Bruce A Cooper,
  • Anand Dhruva,
  • Laura B Dunn,
  • Dale J Langford,
  • Janine K Cataldo,
  • Christina R Baggott,
  • John D Merriman,
  • Marylin Dodd,
  • Kathryn Lee,
  • Claudia West,
  • Steven M Paul,
  • Bradley E Aouizerat

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0040560
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 7
p. e40560

Abstract

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The purposes of this study were to identify distinct latent classes of individuals based on subjective reports of sleep disturbance; to examine differences in demographic, clinical, and symptom characteristics between the latent classes; and to evaluate for variations in pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokine genes between the latent classes. Among 167 oncology outpatients with breast, prostate, lung, or brain cancer and 85 of their FCs, growth mixture modeling (GMM) was used to identify latent classes of individuals based on General Sleep Disturbance Scale (GSDS) obtained prior to, during, and for four months following completion of radiation therapy. Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and haplotypes in candidate cytokine genes were interrogated for differences between the two latent classes. Multiple logistic regression was used to assess the effect of phenotypic and genotypic characteristics on GSDS group membership. Two latent classes were identified: lower sleep disturbance (88.5%) and higher sleep disturbance (11.5%). Participants who were younger and had a lower Karnofsky Performance status score were more likely to be in the higher sleep disturbance class. Variation in two cytokine genes (i.e., IL6, NFKB) predicted latent class membership. Evidence was found for latent classes with distinct sleep disturbance trajectories. Unique genetic markers in cytokine genes may partially explain the interindividual heterogeneity characterizing these trajectories.