TY - JOUR
T1 - Sleep duration and breast cancer incidence
T2 - results from the Million Women Study and meta-analysis of published prospective studies
AU - Wong, Angel T.Y.
AU - Heath, Alicia K.
AU - Tong, Tammy Y.N.
AU - Reeves, Gillian
AU - Floud, Sarah
AU - Beral, Valerie
AU - Travis, Ruth C.
AU - Abbott, Simon
AU - Alison, Rupert
AU - Armstrong, Miranda
AU - Atkinson, Sarah
AU - Baker, Krys
AU - Balkwill, Angela
AU - Barnes, Isobel
AU - Beral, Valerie
AU - Black, Judith
AU - Blanks, Roger
AU - Brown, Anna
AU - Cairns, Benjamin
AU - Chadwick, Andrew
AU - Ewart, Dave
AU - Floud, Sarah
AU - Gaitskell, Kezia
AU - Gathani, Toral
AU - Gerrard, Laura
AU - Goodill, Adrian
AU - Green, Jane
AU - Guiver, Lynden
AU - Hogg, Darren
AU - Lingard, Isobel
AU - Kan, Sau Wan
AU - Langston, Nicky
AU - Pirie, Kirstin
AU - Price, Alison
AU - Reeves, Gillian
AU - Shaw, Keith
AU - Sherman, Emma
AU - Simpson, Rachel
AU - Strange, Helena
AU - Sweetland, Sian
AU - Trickett, Lyndsey
AU - Webster, Anthony
AU - Wotton, Clare
AU - Wright, Lucy
AU - Yang, Owen
AU - Young, Heather
AU - Banks, Emily
AU - Beral, Valerie
AU - Carpenter, Lucy
AU - Dezateux, Carol
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 Sleep Research Society. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Sleep Research Society.
PY - 2021/2/1
Y1 - 2021/2/1
N2 - Study Objectives: To investigate the association between sleep duration and breast cancer incidence, we examined the association in a large UK prospective study and conducted a meta-analysis of prospective studies. Methods: In the Million Women Study, usual sleep duration over a 24-h period was collected in 2001 for 713,150 participants without prior cancer, heart problems, stroke, or diabetes (mean age = 60 years). Follow-up for breast cancer was by record linkage to national cancer registry data for 14.3 years on average from the 3-year resurvey. Cox regression models yielded multivariable-adjusted breast cancer relative risks (RR) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for sleep duration categories. Published prospective studies of sleep duration and breast cancer risk were included in a meta-analysis, which estimated the inverse-variance weighted average of study-specific log RRs for short and for long versus average duration sleep. Results: After excluding the first 5 years to minimize reverse causation bias in the Million Women Study, 24,476 women developed breast cancer. Compared with 7-8 h of sleep, the RRs for <6, 6, 9, and >9 h of sleep were 1.01 (95% CI, 0.95-1.07), 0.99 (0.96-1.03), 1.01 (0.96-1.06), and 1.03 (0.95-1.12), respectively. In a meta-analysis of 14 prospective studies plus the Million Women Study, including 65,410 breast cancer cases, neither short (RR < 7 h = 0.99 [0.98-1.01]) nor long (RR > 8 h = 1.01 [0.98-1.04]) versus average duration sleep was associated with breast cancer risk. Conclusions: The totality of the prospective evidence does not support an association between sleep duration and breast cancer risk.
AB - Study Objectives: To investigate the association between sleep duration and breast cancer incidence, we examined the association in a large UK prospective study and conducted a meta-analysis of prospective studies. Methods: In the Million Women Study, usual sleep duration over a 24-h period was collected in 2001 for 713,150 participants without prior cancer, heart problems, stroke, or diabetes (mean age = 60 years). Follow-up for breast cancer was by record linkage to national cancer registry data for 14.3 years on average from the 3-year resurvey. Cox regression models yielded multivariable-adjusted breast cancer relative risks (RR) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for sleep duration categories. Published prospective studies of sleep duration and breast cancer risk were included in a meta-analysis, which estimated the inverse-variance weighted average of study-specific log RRs for short and for long versus average duration sleep. Results: After excluding the first 5 years to minimize reverse causation bias in the Million Women Study, 24,476 women developed breast cancer. Compared with 7-8 h of sleep, the RRs for <6, 6, 9, and >9 h of sleep were 1.01 (95% CI, 0.95-1.07), 0.99 (0.96-1.03), 1.01 (0.96-1.06), and 1.03 (0.95-1.12), respectively. In a meta-analysis of 14 prospective studies plus the Million Women Study, including 65,410 breast cancer cases, neither short (RR < 7 h = 0.99 [0.98-1.01]) nor long (RR > 8 h = 1.01 [0.98-1.04]) versus average duration sleep was associated with breast cancer risk. Conclusions: The totality of the prospective evidence does not support an association between sleep duration and breast cancer risk.
KW - breast cancer
KW - meta-analysis
KW - prospective
KW - sleep duration
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85102098575&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1093/sleep/zsaa166
DO - 10.1093/sleep/zsaa166
M3 - Article
C2 - 32886784
AN - SCOPUS:85102098575
SN - 0161-8105
VL - 44
JO - Sleep
JF - Sleep
IS - 2
M1 - zsaa166
ER -