Background
Breast cancer has become the most common type of new cancer worldwide and ranks first in the incidence of malignant tumors in women in China [
1]. At present, China’s clinics usually use radiotherapy, chemotherapy and surgical excision-based comprehensive treatment plans for breast cancer [
2]. A variety of treatment methods significantly improves the survival rate of cancer patients but does change the body image of women, resulting in patients having adverse emotional reactions [
3]. Social anxiety is an emotional experience characterized by nervousness and fear that individuals experience in social situations where they come into contact with or are evaluated by others [
4]. Due to the absence of the postoperative breast and scarring of the surgical site, some breast cancer patients no longer want to look straight at their bodies, feeling a decrease in external attractiveness, and developing a strong sense of inferiority and a heavy psychological burden [
5], leading to a decrease in self-esteem levels, fear of looking at and being looked at by others, avoidance of interaction with others, and even reluctance to participate in social activities [
6]. Relevant studies show that breast cancer patients have more severe social anxiety after surgery [
7], and all social interactions are affected to different degrees. Therefore, exploring the mechanisms of social anxiety with a view to finding targets for early intervention is of great clinical and practical importance for improving normal social interactions in breast cancer patients.
Sleep disturbance is a common symptom in breast cancer patients [
8]. Studies have shown that the incidence of sleep disturbance in cancer patients ranges from approximately 30–75% [
9], while the incidence of sleep disturbance in postoperative breast cancer patients is surprisingly high at more than 90% [
10]. Kakizaki et al [
11]. found that poorer sleep quality was not only a risk factor for breast cancer development but also an important factor in the reduced quality of life of patients. Sleep is a key biological behavior for maintaining the immune and endocrine functions of the body [
12] and plays a crucial role in mood and cognitive behavior [
13]. Studies have shown that sleep quality affects the hypothalamic‒pituitary‒adrenal axis (HPA) and the sympathetic nervous system (SNS), and that poor sleep quality synergistically increases the proinflammatory effects of both systems [
14], and causing physiological discomfort to patients [
15].Therefore, it is important to elucidate the factors that affect the sleep quality of breast cancer patients in order to improve their quality of life and ultimately their prognosis.
Social anxiety and sleep disturbance, as the two major risk symptoms of breast cancer patients, are closely related to each other. Social anxiety has been reported to affect the cardiovascular system, neuroendocrine system, and cognitive function in humans and even leads to cognitive decline and sleep problems [
16]. In turn, previous studies have also suggested that physical discomfort, symptom distress, fear, anxiety, and depression in cancer patients are positively associated with even their sleep quality [
17]. To test the theoretical link between social anxiety and sleep quality, Simon and Walker [
18] found that sleep-deprived participants was more likely to become wary and hostile to those around us and thus reject social interaction; Bach et al [
19]. have shown that Sleep quality is closely related to social emotions, and the two can affect each other, which in turn affects the postoperative recovery of breast cancer patients.
However, previous studies on social anxiety and sleep quality suffer from two major shortcomings. One is the use of a quantitative approach that tends to factor in social anxiety and sleep quality based on the total score of a scale, i.e., to assess their correlation by the overall score. In fact, total scale scores based on item equivalence ignore the heterogeneity of the symptoms represented by the different items, which actually have different weightings in the occurrence of the problem. Second, some findings are mainly based on behavioral studies, that is, studies that highlight a behavioral performance-related interconnection of items and then allow speculation on the internal mechanisms of association between the items. However, both quantitative and behavioral studies lack a fine-grained understanding of the interrelationship [
20]. In contrast, network analysis can clarify the fine-grained relationships between scale items [
22] and help us find the best targets for effective interventions by correlating individual dimensions and entries in a way that has not been done before. Therefore, it is necessary to explore the patterns of association between different items of social anxiety and different dimensions of sleep quality.
Network analysis is a promising statistical method and network structure consists of nodes representing psychological variables and connecting lines representing statistical relationships between variables [
23]. Compared to traditional statistical models, network analysis has three advantages: first, it can clarify the fine-grained relationships between individual variables [
24]; second, it can visualize the interactions between variables [
25]; and third, it can evaluate the relative importance of different nodes that are interrelated in the network by computing indicators [
24]. Thus, in this study, network analysis helped us to compare the role of different factors of social anxiety on different dimensions of sleep quality in breast cancer patients.
In summary, this study used network analysis to investigate the fine-grained relationship between social anxiety and sleep quality in breast cancer patients, thus providing theoretical support for the prevention and intervention of social anxiety and sleep quality in patients with breast cancer.
Discussion
In this study, we explored the structure of social anxiety and sleep quality in a group of patients with breast cancer using network analysis. To our knowledge, this is the first network analytic study of the comorbidity between these two constructs. The detailed relationships between the variables revealed by network analysis may provide an indication of the relevant pathways by which social anxiety and sleep quality interact [
35].
Among the four pathways through which A2“working difficulty under watching” correlated with sleep quality, the strongest pathway was A2 “working difficulty under watching”—S5“sleep disturbance.” “Working difficulty under watching,” a classic form of social anxiety, may arise mainly because individuals care too much about what others think and evaluate [
37]. The reason may be that breast cancer patients, because of disease and image problems in social and work processes, often have low self-esteem and are sensitive to negative emotions [
38]. Therefore, the internalization of these negative feelings may lead to a disruption of the sleep-wake cycle [
39]. Sleep disturbance mainly refers to the amount of abnormal sleep; abnormal behavior, including night terrors and nightmares [
40], often occurs during sleep and is often accompanied by anxiety, depression and other negative emotions [
41]. Interestingly, A2 “working difficulty under watching” and S5 “sleep disturbance” showed the highest BEI values in their own community. This means that A2 “working difficulty under watching” has the greatest impact on sleep quality community, and S5 “sleep disturbance” has the greatest impact on social anxiety community. Statistically, we can minimize the probability of comorbidity between social anxiety and sleep disorders if we intervene to cut them off [
33]. Of course, this needs to be tested through practice.
Between the two pathways through which A3 “getting sleepy easily” correlated with sleep quality, the stronger pathway was A3 “getting sleepy easily”—S7 “daytime dysfunction.” Patients with breast cancer often experience cancer-related fatigue, drowsiness, and low energy due to the effects of disease and treatment, which may affect their ability to cope with social interactions [
42]. Excessive daytime sleepiness, drowsiness, and work energy deficiency are the typical manifestations of daytime dysfunction [
43]. In addition, insufficient sleep can lead to the development and maintenance of cancer therapy-related fatigue [
44]. Therefore, the correlation between these two symptoms is not difficult to understand. In addition, we found an interesting negative correlation between A3 “getting sleepy easily” and S6 “hypnotic drugs,” whereas previous studies have found a positive correlation between social anxiety and poor sleep quality [
45]. The reason may be that previous research often used the total score to do correlation, hiding the correlation within the two communities [
46]. This study found that A5 “talking nervously in front of a crowd” was positively correlated with S6 “hypnotic drugs.” A possible reason is that patients with breast cancer have low self-esteem, which can lead to social anxiety. The serious anxious mood can make it difficult for individuals to fall asleep [
48]. Therefore, some patients may take hypnotic drugs to improve sleep. In addition, among the two pathways through which A6 “being nervous in a large group” correlated with sleep quality, the stronger pathway was A6 “being nervous in a large group”-S4 “habitual sleep efficiency.” Breast cancer patients who fear the visibility of their disease may draw negative attention in social situations [
49], which may contribute to social anxiety and social withdrawal. Sleep efficiency is defined as the ratio of the total sleep time in a night compared with the total time spent in bed [
50]. One study showed that individuals with low self-esteem and anxiety have lower sleep efficiency [
51], similar to the results of this study. The possible reason is that when an individual is in a state of anxiety, he or she will often have difficulty falling asleep, and his or her sleep efficiency will decrease accordingly.
Among all the symptoms included in this network, the sleep quality symptom S1 “subjective sleep quality” had the highest EI centrality. The high EI centrality indicated that targeting this node may provide the highest general benefit to other nodes in the network [
52]. For patients with both social anxiety and sleep quality, targeting this symptom may provide the highest benefit. Subjective sleep quality refers to the subjective judgment of the patient according to their own sleep condition [
53]. Poor subjective sleep quality is the patient’s subjective dissatisfaction with the duration and quality of sleep [
53]. Studies have shown that individuals’ feelings and evaluations of their own sleep affect their level of concern about sleep disorders and their willingness to treat them [
54]. Among them, individuals with poor subjective sleep quality are more likely to be concerned about sleep disorders, and they tend to feel fatigue, poor concentration, and depressed mood, which affect normal daytime functioning and physiological status [
55], thus further aggravating anxiety states [
56], and even affecting normal socialization and leading to social alienation [
57]. Therefore, in assessing, preventing, and improving the co-morbidity of sleep disorders and social anxiety, it is may need first concentrate on how to improve subjective sleep quality with less focus on other symptoms. It is of great significance in preventing social anxiety, improving the prognosis of diseases and reducing the waste of medical resources. The main intervention strategies on sleep in breast cancer patients include drug therapy and nondrug therapy. Drug therapy is a common therapy for clinical sleep disorder. The common nondrug therapies include cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) [
58] and exercise therapy [
59]. CBT includes sleep restriction therapy, relaxation training therapy and cognitive therapy and is thought to be the best intervention for chronic insomnia [
60]. Rogers et al [
61]. found that aerobic exercise (swimming, calisthenics, walking, etc.) in exercise therapy also significantly reduced fatigue and sleepiness and improved sleep quality. Other studies have shown that mindfulness-based interventions [
62] and bright light therapy [
63] play important roles in improving sleep quality in breast cancer patients. Therefore, medical staff should carefully assess the patient’s sleep and adopt appropriate methods to improve their sleep quality.
This original study provides a new direction for intervention in the comorbidity of social anxiety with sleep disorders in breast cancer patients. however, this study has some limitations worth mentioning. First, the study included only female patients with breast cancer. These findings may not be generalizable to survivors of other types of cancer. Second, our study relied solely on self-reported psychometric data without clinical diagnosis for symptom assessment. Future studies could validate our findings on the basis of the same symptoms identified by a professional clinical diagnosis. In addition, the network structure constructed here investigated the effects among the variables based on the population level. This means that within a single individual, the network structure may not be replicated in the same way.
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