Exploring the impact of chronotype, chrononutrition and lifestyle on bladder cancer

Feb 21, 2025International urology and nephrology

How body clock type, meal timing, and lifestyle relate to bladder cancer

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Abstract

101 bladder cancer patients were assessed for nutrition behavior, sleep preferences, and chronotype.

  • No significant differences in chronotypes were found between cancer and non-cancer patients (p = 0.0634).
  • Most participants did not exhibit signs of social or eating jet lag, nor morning or evening latency.
  • Total sleep duration was similar for both groups, averaging 8.5 hours for cancer patients and 9.0 hours for non-cancer patients (p > 0.99).
  • The eating window showed a weak difference between the groups (p = 0.061).
  • Salivary alpha-amylase levels averaged 193.9 U/ml and IgA levels averaged 129.0 μg/ml, with no significant differences between groups (p = 0.43; p = 0.18).

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