Incidence of sleep problems and their mediating role on depression and anxious preoccupation in patients with resected, non-advanced cancer: data from NEOcoping study

Publication date

2020-04-03T06:32:15Z

2020-04-03T06:32:15Z

2019-01-01

2020-04-03T06:32:15Z

Abstract

Background: Our study analyzes the incidence of sleep problems and their mediating role on depression and anxious preoccupation in patients with resected, non-advanced cancer. Methods: A multi-institutional, prospective, observational study was conducted with 750 participants of 14 hospitals in Spain. Participants' socio-demographic and clinical characteristics were collected using a standardized self-report form and using EORTC QoL-QLQ-C30, BSI, Mini-MAC questionnaires. Results: In women, sleep problems, depression and anxious preoccupation were observed in 65, 41 and 21%, respectively. In men, sleep problems, depression and anxious preoccupation were reported in 51, 29 and 61%, respectively. More sleep problems, depression and anxious preoccupation were found among women than males. Depression was a significant predictor of anxious preoccupation. In males, sleep problems partially mediated this association. This was not confirmed in women.

Document Type

Article


Accepted version

Language

English

Publisher

Springer Verlag

Related items

Versió postprint del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1007/s12094-018-02018-2

Clinical & Translational Oncology, 2019, num. 21, p. 1104-1107

https://doi.org/10.1007/s12094-018-02018-2

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Rights

(c) Federación de Sociedades Españolas de Oncología (FESEO), 2019

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