AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores how sleep apnea affects survival rates after a cancer diagnosis, suggesting potential links between the two.
  • Despite concerns about sleep apnea accelerating cancer progression, patients with sleep apnea had a higher overall 5-year relative survival rate (83.6%) compared to the general population (71.6%).
  • However, some specific cancers, like melanoma and uterine cancer, showed lower survival rates for those with sleep apnea, indicating that more research is needed to understand these differences.

Article Abstract

Study Objectives: In vitro and animal studies suggest that intermittent hypoxia characterizing sleep apnea contributes to accelerated cancer progression. However, the impact of sleep apnea on survival subsequent to cancer diagnosis is unknown.

Methods: We identified a cohort of 1,575 adults diagnosed with sleep apnea between 2005 and 2014 with a subsequent cancer diagnosis via linkage of the University of Washington Medicine system and a population-based cancer registry serving the same Seattle-Puget Sound region. We computed age-standardized 5-year relative survival after cancer diagnosis for all cancers combined, and for specific cancer sites, for both the sleep apnea cohort and the general Seattle-Puget Sound population, and we used US life tables as the reference population. Relative survival was estimated by sex, cancer stage, and health care engagement.

Results: Five-year overall relative survival for cancer was more favorable in the sleep apnea cohort than in the general population [83.6%, 95% confidence interval (CI): 79.8%-86.8% vs 71.6%, 95% CI: 71.3%-71.9%]; this pattern was applicable to most specific cancer sites. However, 5-year relative survival was slightly less favorable in the sleep apnea cohort among patients with melanoma (97.7%, 95% CI: 84.6%-99.7% vs 99.2%, 95% CI: 98.8%-99.5%) and cancer of the corpus uteri (84.0%, 95% CI: 58.2%-94.5% vs 84.6%, 95% CI: 83.1%-86.0%).

Conclusions: The fact that survival after cancer, overall and for most cancer sites, was more favorable in patients with sleep apnea warrants larger community-based studies to further tease out effects of sleep apnea and treatment on site-specific survival for different cancer types, particularly in patients with melanoma or uterine cancer.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7849795PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.5664/jcsm.8312DOI Listing

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