Howell, D., Oliver, T.K., Keller-Olaman, S., Davidson, J., Garland, S., Samuels, C., . . . Taylor, C. (2013). A Pan-Canadian practice guideline: Prevention, screening, assessment, and treatment of sleep disturbances in adults with cancer. Supportive Care in Cancer, 10, 2695–2706.

DOI Link

Purpose & Patient Population

PURPOSE: To disseminate practice guidelines for sleep disturbances in patients with cancer and provide a care algorithm for translation into practice
 
TYPES OF PATIENTS ADDRESSED: Adult patients with cancer (aged 18 years or older) 

Type of Resource/Evidence-Based Process

RESOURCE TYPE: Evidence-based guideline  
 
PROCESS OF DEVELOPMENT: Systematic review by panel of content experts; also used consensus of panel to develop recommendations 
 
DATABASES USED: Not provided
 
KEYWORDS: Not provided, except for article key words
 
INCLUSION CRITERIA: Clinical practice guidelines; systematic reviews; randomized controlled trials (RCTs) if data pertained to patients with cancer or cancer survivors with sleep disturbances, interventions to improve sleep were included, or primary outcomes in the article included sleep quality, efficiency, latency, duration, or disturbance
 
EXCLUSION CRITERIA: Articles in which patients with cancer and cancer survivors were only a subgroup; non-English; not overtly related to sleep; intervention focused on samples of adults without cancer

Phase of Care and Clinical Applications

  • PHASE OF CARE: Multiple phases of care

Results Provided in the Reference

The AGREE II and Cochrane Risk of Bias tool were used for evaluation of articles. Three practice guidelines and 12 RCTs were evaluated, and 27 supplemental supportive documents were reviewed (e.g., reviews, information summaries, consensus statements, best practice advice), which were not always cancer-focused. Results are summarized briefly with modest overall quality found in the practice guidelines and RCTs. Considerations were made for small samples, short follow-up in effectiveness trials, and lack of details on methods. Formal assessments were not conducted on supplemental articles to fill in missing gaps of knowledge.

Guidelines & Recommendations

The guideline recommends, at minimum, a brief and focused assessment for sleep disturbances in patients with cancer and cancer survivors and provides options for screening tools and self-report assessments. Strategies, algorithms for screening, assessment, and management are provided based on literature, but they also are consensus-driven. The screening should include a short two-step process using standardized tools. The focused assessment then should identify chronicity and severity of the sleep problems (parameters of symptoms of poor sleep included). This includes key questions and a sleep diary for full evaluation. Referrals for noninsomnia-related disorders (e.g., apnea, restless legs syndrome) are prompted within the algorithm. Based on the initial evaluation, nonpharmacologic and pharmacologic interventions are recommended in a step process with care pathways that match the severity of the sleep disturbance (i.e., mild, transient, insomnia syndrome) with three corresponding care pathways. Preventative and supportive educational information is provided for all patients with cancer and cancer survivors that focuses on sleep hygiene and other sleep-promoting strategies. Rationale is provided for each strategy of treatment within this algorithm.

Limitations

  • The guideline addresses sleep disturbances within the context of an insomnia syndrome.
  • All other disorders requiring referral are not within the scope of the proposed guidelines.
  • Menopause-related sleep disturbances are not addressed.
  • The use of the guideline would necessitate training of healthcare providers to fully incorporate into practice. 

Nursing Implications

A basic and focused screening for sleep problems in patients with cancer is needed, with corresponding treatment and education as pertained to the scope of practice.