Cancer Medicine (Sep 2022)

Associations between longitudinal changes in sleep disturbance and depressive and anxiety symptoms during the COVID‐19 virus pandemic among older women with and without breast cancer in the thinking and living with breast cancer study

  • Traci N. Bethea,
  • Wanting Zhai,
  • Xingtao Zhou,
  • Tim A. Ahles,
  • Jaeil Ahn,
  • Harvey J. Cohen,
  • Asma A. Dilawari,
  • Deena M. A. Graham,
  • Heather S. L. Jim,
  • Brenna C. McDonald,
  • Zev M. Nakamura,
  • Sunita K. Patel,
  • Kelly E. Rentscher,
  • James Root,
  • Andrew J. Saykin,
  • Brent J. Small,
  • Kathleen M. Van Dyk,
  • Jeanne S. Mandelblatt,
  • Judith E. Carroll

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/cam4.4682
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 17
pp. 3352 – 3363

Abstract

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Abstract Purpose Several studies have reported sleep disturbances during the COVID‐19 virus pandemic. Little data exist about the impact of the pandemic on sleep and mental health among older women with breast cancer. We sought to examine whether women with and without breast cancer who experienced new sleep problems during the pandemic had worsening depression and anxiety. Methods Breast cancer survivors aged ≥60 years with a history of nonmetastatic breast cancer (n = 242) and frequency‐matched noncancer controls (n = 158) active in a longitudinal cohort study completed a COVID‐19 virus pandemic survey from May to September 2020 (response rate 83%). Incident sleep disturbance was measured using the restless sleep item from the Center for Epidemiological Studies‐Depression Scale (CES‐D). CES‐D score (minus the sleep item) captured depressive symptoms; the State‐Anxiety subscale of the State Trait Anxiety Inventory measured anxiety symptoms. Multivariable linear regression models examined how the development of sleep disturbance affected changes in depressive or anxiety symptoms from the most recent prepandemic survey to the pandemic survey, controlling for covariates. Results The prevalence of sleep disturbance during the pandemic was 22.3%, with incident sleep disturbance in 10% and 13.5% of survivors and controls, respectively. Depressive and anxiety symptoms significantly increased during the pandemic among women with incident sleep disturbance (vs. no disturbance) (β = 8.16, p < 0.01 and β = 6.14, p < 0.01, respectively), but there were no survivor‐control differences in the effect. Conclusion Development of sleep disturbances during the COVID‐19 virus pandemic may negatively affect older women's mental health, but breast cancer survivors diagnosed with the nonmetastatic disease had similar experiences as women without cancer.

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