- ICH GCP
- US Clinical Trials Registry
- Clinical Trial NCT00519168
Sleep, Circadian Hormonal Dysregulation, and Breast Cancer Survival
October 4, 2017 updated by: David Spiegel, Stanford University
Sleep, Circadian, Hormonal Dysregulation, and Breast Cancer Survival
Recent research provides evidence that disrupted circadian rhythms, including hormonal patterns and sleep, are associated with increased risk of breast cancer incidence and faster progression to mortality.
We have observed that a loss of normal diurnal cortisol rhythm associated with more awakenings during the night predicts early mortality with metastatic breast cancer.
Other recent studies have shown that nighttime shift work is associated with higher breast cancer incidence, and in a murine model disrupting circadian cortisol cycles produced a doubling of implanted tumor growth.
There is also recent evidence that abnormal clock genes are associated with cancer.
However, it is not clear whether sleep disruption per se affects breast cancer progression, or whether such an effect is mediated by hormonal and immune dysregulation of this prevalent and hormone-mediated cancer.
We propose to study sleep disruption as a prognostic factor in the progression of metastatic breast cancer.
We will also examine sleep patterns in association with disrupted circadian rhythms of cortisol, ACTH, and melatonin as well as measures of immune function known to be salient to breast cancer progression.
These are natural killer cell cytoxicity and specific cytokine, IL-6.
We plan to recruit 105 women 45 years through 75 years with metastatic or recurrent breast cancer and 20 age and SES-matched controls for a two-week at home sleep study with Actiwatch and two nights of in-home EEG monitoring, followed by 28 hours of continuous blood sampling and one night of EEG sleep monitoring in our lab at Stanford.
This will provide a full examination of circadian hormones associated with sleep patterns.
We will relate these assessments to the subsequent course of breast cancer progression.
Results of this study will provide specific evidence regarding how improved sleep management may affect the course of breast cancer.
Aim 1: To study 24-hr diurnal rhythms of HPA axis hormones and melatonin in women with metastatic or recurrent breast cancer.
Hypothesis 1: Women with metastatic or recurrent breast cancer will have reduced amplitude and disrupted phase of 24-hr diurnal rhythms of cortisol, ACTH, and melatonin.
Aim 2: To describe sleep disruption in women with metastatic breast cancer and examine psychosocial, endocrine, and immune factors that may be associated with sleep disruption.
Hypothesis 2: Women with metastatic or recurrent breast cancer will have a higher incidence of both at home and laboratory-examined sleep disruption than control women without breast cancer.
Hypothesis 3: Poorer sleep quality will be associated with more pain, more emotional suppression in response to stressors, less emotional support, greater depression and anxiety, and greater perceived and traumatic stress.
Hypothesis 4: Poorer sleep quality and quantity of sleep and daytime sleepiness and fatigue will be associated with abnormal circadian neuroendocrine (i.e., cortisol, ACTH, and melatonin) and immune patterns (i.e., suppressed day and night time NK activity and loss of NK rhythms; increased day time IL-6 levels and /or loss of IL-6 rhythm).
Aim 3: To study the relationship between sleep disruption and survival time among metastatic and recurrent breast cancer patients.
Hypothesis 5: Poorer sleep quality and quantity of sleep will predict shorter survival.
Hypothesis 6: Reduced diurnal amplitude and an abnormal phase of cortisol will predict shorter survival.
Explanatory Aim 4: To investigate whether sleep disruption mediates the relation of psychosocial factors to health outcomes.
Study Overview
Status
Completed
Conditions
Intervention / Treatment
Study Type
Observational
Enrollment (Actual)
141
Contacts and Locations
This section provides the contact details for those conducting the study, and information on where this study is being conducted.
Study Locations
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California
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Stanford, California, United States, 94305
- Stanford University School of Medicine
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Participation Criteria
Researchers look for people who fit a certain description, called eligibility criteria. Some examples of these criteria are a person's general health condition or prior treatments.
Eligibility Criteria
Ages Eligible for Study
45 years to 75 years (Adult, Older Adult)
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Yes
Genders Eligible for Study
Female
Sampling Method
Non-Probability Sample
Study Population
women with breast cancer
Description
Inclusion Criteria:
Inclusion criteria for women with breast cancer:
- Female
- Between 45 and 75 years old (45<=>75)
- Documented metastatic or recurrent breast cancer
- Karnofsky rating of at least 70% (measure of physical ability used to assess medically ill patients)
- Residence within the Greater San Francisco Bay Area
- Proficiency in English sufficient to complete questionnaires
- Postmenopausal
- Non smoker (occasional smoking will be ok, they need to agree to stop smoking during study participation. If smoking cessation will cause withdrawal, they can not participate)
- Willing to go through a 30 day washout period if they are currently on Decadron or any other corticosteroids (depending on the dose, may be able to reduce 30 days to 2 weeks)
- If taking Benzodiazepines, willing to stop 3 days before the collection of physiological measures, such as the 2 week at home sleep recordings and then the 3 days before and during the GCRC (if not possible, washout period may be reduced to 3 days before and during the CTRU/GCRC stay)
- Willingness to discontinue taking melatonin one week before the CTRU/GCRC stay
- Willingness to discontinue any current sleeping medications 3 days before 2 week at home sleep data collection through the end of study participation (if not possible, washout period may be reduced to 3 days before and during the CTRU/GCRC stay)
- Willingness to abstain from traveling 2 or more time zones away from California (Pacific time), two weeks before and during participation in the study
- Willing/able to refrain from doing shift-work in a non-traditional schedule (such as 4pm to midnight or 10pm to 6am) starting two weeks before at home sleep collection through the end of study participation.
- Agree to catheterization for blood sample collection
- Agrees with the use of heparin during the blood draws (used to keep IV line from clotting)
- Has graduated high school or obtained GED
- US Citizen or resident viable for payment, legally
Inclusion criteria for healthy controls:
- Female
- Between 45 and 75 years old (45<=>75)
- No history of any type of cancer
- Residence within the Greater San Francisco Bay Area
- Proficiency in English to complete questionnaires
- Post Menopausal
- Non-smoker (occasional smoking will be ok, they need to agree to stop smoking during study participation. If smoking cessation will cause withdrawal, they can not participate)
- If taking benzodiazepines, willing to stop 3 days before the collection of physiological measures, such as the 2 week at home sleep recordings and then the 3 days before and during the GCRC (if not possible, washout period may be reduced to 3 days before and during the CTRU/GCRC stay)
- Willingness to discontinue taking melatonin one week before the CTRU/GCRC stay
- Willingness to discontinue any current sleeping medications 3 days before 2 week at home sleep data collection through the end of study participation (if not possible, washout period may be reduced to 3 days before and during the CTRU/GCRC stay)
- Willingness to abstain from traveling 2 or more time zones away from California (Pacific time), two weeks before and during participation in the study
- Willing/able to refrain from doing shift-work in a non-traditional schedule (such as 4pm to midnight or 10pm to 6am) starting two weeks before at home sleep collection through the end of study participation
- Agree to catheterization for blood sample collection
- Agrees with the use of heparin during the blood draws (used to keep IV line from clotting)
- Has graduated high school or obtained GED
- US Citizen or resident viable for payment, legally
- Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) score >6
Exclusion Criteria:Exclusion criteria for women with breast cancer:
- Other active cancers within the past 10 years other than breast cancer, basal cell or squamous cell carcinomas of the skin, or in situ cancer of the cervix
- Concurrent medical condition likely to influence short term survival (such as liver disease, asthma etc, depending on severity)
- History of major psychiatric illness that required hospitalization or medication
- Substance Dependence or abuse
- Low hematocrit (up to the digression of the PI, may be able to participate in parts of the protocol)
- Bilateral lymph nodes removed
- Diagnosis of diabetes (need to check with PI, some mild cases of diabetes may be ok)
- Positive supraclavicular lymph nodes as the only metastatic lesion at the time of initial diagnosis
- PICC line too close to the few available veins, viable for catheterization (too high of a risk for infection/complication), and is on the only arm which did not have lymph node surgery
Exclusion criteria for healthy controls:
- Concurrent medical condition likely to influence short term survival (such as liver disease, asthma etc, depending on severity)
- History of major psychiatric illness that required hospitalization or medication
- Substance dependence or abuse
- Low hematocrit (up to the digression of the PI, may be able to participate in parts of the protocol)
- Diagnosis of diabetes (need to check with PI, some mild cases of diabetes may be ok)
Study Plan
This section provides details of the study plan, including how the study is designed and what the study is measuring.
How is the study designed?
Design Details
Collaborators and Investigators
This is where you will find people and organizations involved with this study.
Sponsor
Study record dates
These dates track the progress of study record and summary results submissions to ClinicalTrials.gov. Study records and reported results are reviewed by the National Library of Medicine (NLM) to make sure they meet specific quality control standards before being posted on the public website.
Study Major Dates
Study Start
September 1, 2006
Primary Completion (Actual)
August 31, 2011
Study Completion (Actual)
August 31, 2011
Study Registration Dates
First Submitted
August 20, 2007
First Submitted That Met QC Criteria
August 20, 2007
First Posted (Estimate)
August 22, 2007
Study Record Updates
Last Update Posted (Actual)
October 6, 2017
Last Update Submitted That Met QC Criteria
October 4, 2017
Last Verified
October 1, 2017
More Information
Terms related to this study
Additional Relevant MeSH Terms
Other Study ID Numbers
- BRSADJ0013 (Other Identifier: Stanford University)
- 97312 (Other Identifier: Stanford University Alternate IRB Approval Number)
This information was retrieved directly from the website clinicaltrials.gov without any changes. If you have any requests to change, remove or update your study details, please contact register@clinicaltrials.gov. As soon as a change is implemented on clinicaltrials.gov, this will be updated automatically on our website as well.
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