| Literature DB >> 33233617 |
David Gozal1, Isaac Almendros2,3,4, Amanda I Phipps5,6, Francisco Campos-Rodriguez3,7, Miguel A Martínez-García8, Ramon Farré2,3,4.
Abstract
Obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) is a prevalent disorder associated with increased cardiovascular, metabolic and neurocognitive morbidity. Recently, an increasing number of basic, clinical and epidemiological reports have suggested that OSA may also increase the risk of cancer, and adversely impact cancer progression and outcomes. This hypothesis is convincingly supported by biological evidence linking certain solid tumours and hypoxia, as well as by experimental studies involving cell and animal models testing the effects of intermittent hypoxia and sleep fragmentation that characterize OSA. However, the clinical and epidemiological studies do not conclusively confirm that OSA adversely affects cancer, even if they hold true for specific cancers such as melanoma. It is likely that the inconclusive studies reflect that they were not specifically designed to test the hypothesis or because of the heterogeneity of the relationship of OSA with different cancer types or even sub-types. This review critically focusses on the extant basic, clinical, and epidemiological evidence while formulating proposed directions on how the field may move forward.Entities:
Keywords: intermittent hypoxia; malignancies; sleep breathing disorders; sleep fragmentation
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33233617 PMCID: PMC7699730 DOI: 10.3390/ijms21228779
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Diagram illustrating the biological plausibility of cancer aggravation by obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA). (Top) Example of the signals extracted from a routine polysomnographic study in a patient with OSA: an electroencephalography channel (EEG) showing arousals (orange); breathing flow assessed by nasal prongs (Flow), showing cyclic apnoeas and ventilation; and arterial oxygen saturation (SaO2), indicating intermittent hypoxemia (figures are SaO2 in %). A background of OSA research indicates that intermittent hypoxia and sleep fragmentation induce biological alterations, which, according to the background of cancer research, are modulators of cancer aggravation.
Figure 2(A) Diagrams of the experimental settings to apply intermittent hypoxia (top) and sleep fragmentation (bottom) to rodents. Air with cyclic O2 fraction (FiO2) in the animal cage induces recurrent hypoxemia (SaO2). Smooth cyclic movement of a bar (blue) in the cage ground induces cyclic arousal, as reflected by electromyography (EMG) and electroencephalography (EEG) signals in the mice. (B) Experimental application of the obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) challenges (IH: intermittent hypoxia, SF: sleep fragmentation) and control normoxia to cancer models of tumorigenesis (spontaneous by ageing or induced by virus/chemicals) and tumours induced by subcutaneous, intravenous, or orthotopic cancer cell application.
Summary of animal model research focused on the effects of OSA on cancer aggravation.
| Cancer Type | IH | SF | Tumour Growth | Invasion/Metastasis | Angiogenesis | Carcinogenesis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Melanoma | 8 [ | 0 | ↑ 8/8 | ↑ 3/3 | ↑ 2/2 | ― |
| Lung | 13 [ | 3 | ↑ 13/13 | ↑ 13/13 | ↑ 1/1 | ↑ 2/2 |
| Kidney | 1 [ | 0 | ↑ 0/1 | ― | ↑ 1/1 | ― |
| Breast | 2 [ | 0 | ↑ 2/2 | ↑ 2/2 | ― | ― |
| Colon | 2 [ | 0 | ― | ― | ― | ↑ 2/2 |
| Myeloma | 1 [ | 0 | ↑ 1/1 | ― | ― | ― |
Intermittent hypoxia (IH) and sleep fragmentation (SF): OSA challenge applied to the animals. N Pub: number of published papers; ↑ x/y: outcome increase observed in x studies out of the y in which it was assessed; ―: outcome not reported. Green/red indicate that the results did/not confirm the hypothesis that the OSA challenge aggravates cancer.
Figure 3Potential mechanisms and immunological alterations in the interaction between OSA and cancer (see the text for an explanation).
Melanoma: most relevant clinical and epidemiological studies on its association with sleep-disordered breathing.
| Author (Year) | Design | Patients | Cancer Outcome | Main Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Cohen (2015) | Epidemiological | Three prospective cohorts (178,633 subjects with 880 patients with melanoma) | Incidence | |
| Gozal (2016) | Epidemiological | 5.6 million subjects (with 1.7 million of OSA patients and 19,927 of melanoma patients) | Incidence | |
| Sillah (2018) | Epidemiological Retrospective study | 34,402 patients with sleep apnoea | Incidence | |
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| Martinez-Garcia (2014) | Multicentric, | 56 patients with melanoma | Prevalence | |
| Martinez-Garcia (2018) | Multicentric, | 443 patients with melanoma | Aggressiveness | |
OSA: Obstructive sleep apnoea; Tsat90%: Night-time spent with an oxygen saturation below 90%; DI4%: Desaturation index at 4%; AHI: Apnoea-hypopnoea index; SDB: Sleep-disordered breathing.
Non-melanoma malignancies: most relevant clinical and epidemiological studies on their association with sleep-disordered breathing (SDB).
| Author (Year) | Design and SDB Assessment | Patients | Main Outcomes |
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| Chang (2014) | Retrospective study. | 846 women with SDB and 4230 age-matched control women without ICD-9 codes corresponding to SDB | -A diagnosis of SDB was associated with increased risk of having a diagnosis of breast cancer, after a 5 years follow-up, compared to the control group (adjusted HR 2.09; 95% CI 1.06–4.12). |
| Phipps (2016) | Longitudinal study. | 6825 postmenopausal women with diagnosis of primary breast cancer during follow-up from the Women’s Health Initiative cohort. | -Women who reported at enrolment a sleep duration ≤6 h/night combined with frequent snoring (≥5 nights/week) had substantially poorer breast cancer survival than those reporting neither (HR 2.14, 95% CI 1.47–3.13). |
| Campos-Rodriguez (2018) | Cross-sectional study specifically designed to address the association between SDB and breast cancer. | 83 consecutive women <65 years with a diagnosis of primary breast cancer. | -The prevalence of SDB was 51·8%, with a median (IQR) AHI of 5.1 (2–9.4) and ODI4 of 1.5 (0.5–5.8). |
| Choi (2019) | Retrospective study. | 45,699 women >20 years with SDB and 228,502 age-matched control women without ICD-10 codes corresponding to SDB | -The incidence of breast cancer among women with OSA was significantly higher than |
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| Seijo (2019) | Cross-sectional study. | 302 individuals from 2 cohorts: SAIL cohort, which investigated SDB prevalence in lung cancer patients, and SAILS cohort, which assessed SDB in subjects participating in a lung cancer screening program | -The prevalence of SDB was 42%. |
| Dreher (2018) | Cross-sectional study. | 100 patients with newly diagnosed lung cancer from 3 German centres. | -The prevalence of SDB was 49%, with 32% showing mild SDB (AHI5-14.9) and 17% showing moderate-to-severe SDB (AHI ≥ 15). |
| Li (2017) | Retrospective study. | 43 consecutive patients >18 years with concurrent SDB and lung cancer. | -Patients with moderate or severe SDB (AHI 15–29.9 and ≥30, respectively) and lung cancer had lower survival than those with only mild SDB (AHI5–14.9). |
| Liu (2019) | Case-control study. | 45 patients with primary lung cancer suitable for surgical resection and 45 age and sex-matched controls. | -Patients with lung cancer had statistically significant greater risk of SDB, as well as more hypoxemia, time spent with O2 saturation <90% and higher ODI compared to the matched control group. |
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| Zhang (2013) | Prospective cohort study. | 30,121 men in the Health Professionals Follow-up Study and 76,368 women in the Nurses’ Health Study | -The presence of long sleep duration (≥9 h/day) associated with regular snoring (defined as snoring at least few days per week) was associated with incident colorectal tumours in both men and women, compared to individuals who slept an average of 7 h (men: HR 1.80, 95% CI 1.14–2.84; women HR 2.32, 95% CI 1.24–4.36). |
| Lee (2017) | Retrospective study plus case-control study. | 163 consecutive patients who underwent overnight polysomnography and subsequent colonoscopy. | -SDB was associated with an increased risk of having an advanced colorectal cancer for both, mild (AHI 5–14·9) and moderate-to-severe (AHI ≥ 15) SDB after adjusting for confounders (OR 14.09; 95% CI 1.55–127.83; and OR 14.12; 95% CI 1.52–131.25, respectively). |
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| Chung (2016) | Retrospective case-control study. | 1236 men with SDB and 4944 age-matched men without ICD-9 codes corresponding to SDB. | -The prevalence of prostate cancer was higher in the SDB than in the control group (0.97% vs. 0.40%, |
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| Vilaseca (2016) | Retrospective study. | 2579 patients who underwent radical or partial nephrectomy for clear cell renal cell carcinoma. | -The prevalence of self-reported SDB was 7%. |
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| Dal Molin (2016) | Retrospective study. | 1031 patients who underwent surgical resection without neoadjuvant therapy for pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma. | -Patients with SDB were significantly more likely to have lymph node-negative tumours than non-OSA cases (37.7% vs. 21.8%, |
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| Chen (2014) | Retrospective case-control study. | 23,055 newly diagnosed cases of SDB and 69,165 age- and gender-matched individuals without ICD-9 codes corresponding to SDB. | -SDB was associated with higher incidence of primary central nervous system cancers compared to non-SDB individuals (adjusted HR 1.54, 95% CI 1.01–2.37). |
| Lymphoma (2020)[ | Retrospective case-control study. | 198,574 newly diagnosed cases of SDB and 992,870 age- and gender-matched individuals without ICD-10 codes corresponding to SDB | -The incidence of non-Hodgkin lymphoma among patients with OSA was significantly higher than that among the controls (HR 1.40, 95%CI 1.16-1.69). |
Figure 4Relative risk for association between obstructive apnoea (OSA) and cancer incidence in previous epidemiologic studies.
Proposed future studies.
| Prospective longitudinal, multicentred studies focused on a single organ cancer type that incorporate polysomnographic assessments at the time of cancer diagnosis, track adherence to treatment of OSA, and include multi-omics and tumour heterogeneity characterization. |
| Longitudinal studies of large cohorts of patients diagnosed with OSA without cancer and matched controls and long-term surveillance for cancer. |
| Prospective cancer treatment outcomes of patients with and without OSA with site- and type-specific cancers. |
| Search for OSA-related specific cancer biomarkers of aggressiveness, treatment selection, and personalized outcomes. |
| In vitro studies of differential effects of variable sustained and intermittent hypoxia profiles on specific tumours and on a large repertoire of specific tumour variants that incorporate multicellular matrices and organoid-based cellular interactions. |
| Exploration of animal models of OSA and their effect on cancer immunosurveillance and formulation of novel preventive strategies. |
| Identification and development of novel cancer therapeutic targets related to intrinsically driven pathways related to sleep-disordered breathing. |