4.4 Article

Effects of a wearable technology-based physical activity intervention on sleep quality in breast cancer survivors: the ACTIVATE Trial

Journal

JOURNAL OF CANCER SURVIVORSHIP
Volume 15, Issue 2, Pages 273-280

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11764-020-00930-7

Keywords

Sleep; Physical activity; Fitness trackers; Breast neoplasms; Survivorship; Accelerometry

Funding

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Physical activity interventions using wearable devices can improve sleep quality in breast cancer survivors. Short-term improvements as well as sustained effects over a longer duration were observed. Wearable devices showed stronger effects in participants with poor sleep quality.
Introduction Physical activity interventions can improve sleep quality in breast cancer survivors. This paper examines the effects of the ACTIVATE Trial, a wearable-based physical activity intervention (Garmin Vivofit2 (R) coupled with behavioral feedback, goal setting, and health coaching) on sleep outcomes. Methods Post-primary treatment, inactive, postmenopausal breast cancer survivors were recruited and randomized to primary intervention or waitlist. Wrist-worn actigraphy (sleep onset latency, SOL; total sleep time, TST; sleep efficiency, SE; wake after sleep onset, WASO; and number of awakenings, NWAKE) and questionnaire-derived sleep measures (Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index) were assessed at baseline (T1), 12 weeks (end of primary intervention and start of waitlist intervention, T2), and at 24 weeks (T3). Results Eighty-three women (mean age = 62 years) were randomized; trial retention was 94% at T2 and 87% at T3. At T2, primary intervention participants had greater improvements in WASO (- 5.7 min, 95% CI - 11.7 to - 0.2) and NWAKE compared with the waitlist arm (- 2.0, 95% CI - 3.6 to - 0.4). At T3, within-group improvements were observed for SE (both groups), WASO (both groups), NWAKE (primary intervention group only), total PSQI score (primary intervention group), and sleep efficacy (primary intervention group). Conclusions The intervention reduced actigraphy-measured sleep disturbances. Within-group analyses suggest that improvements in sleep quality are sustained over a longer duration, and there may be similar benefits from an abridged intervention (wearable device only). Actigraphy-measured effects appeared stronger in participants who were poor sleepers at study entry. Implications for Cancer Survivors Wearable technology can increase physical activity and improve sleep for breast cancer survivors.

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