Insomnia and Cardiovascular Diseases: Influence of Behavioral Treatments and Preferences
NCT ID: NCT02513017
Last Updated: 2015-07-31
Study Results
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Basic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
204 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2009-02-28
2013-03-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Objectives: The study addresses substantive and methodological areas of interest to the funding opportunity. The substantive objectives are: 1) to examine the direct effects of SCI and SRT on sleep (quantity and quality), psychological (anxiety, depression), and physical (cardiovascular symptoms and events) outcomes, and 2) to examine the indirect effects of SCI and SRT on psychological and physical outcomes, mediated through sleep quantity and quality. The methodological objectives are: 1) to compare participants randomized to treatment and participants allocated to treatment of choice on attrition, satisfaction with treatment, adherence to treatment, and sleep, psychological and physical outcomes; 2) among randomized participants, to compare those who receive and those who do not receive the preferred treatment on attrition, satisfaction with, and adherence to treatment, and sleep, psychological, and physical outcomes; and, 3) to explore the extent to which satisfaction with treatment mediates the influence of preferences on treatment adherence and outcomes.
Design: A two-stage partially randomized clinical trial will be used. Eligible participants will be randomized to the random and preference arms of the trial. In the random arm, participants will be randomly assigned to no-treatment, SCI or SRT. In the preference arm, participants will be allocated to SCI or SRT based on their preferences. Outcome data will be collected at 4 time points: pretest, posttest, and 6-month and 12-month follow-up.
Sample: Non-institutionalized, cognitively intact, adults (\> 40 years) will be included if they complain of difficulty initiating and/or maintaining sleep (\> 30 minutes per night, for \> 3 nights per week, for \> 6 weeks) that is not associated with sleep apnea. A sample of 60 participants per group, for a total of 300, is required to detect medium effects of the behavioral treatments and treatment preferences on sleep outcomes.
Measures: All outcomes will be measured with established measures. Adherence to treatment will be estimated with relevant data from the daily sleep diary. Preferences for, and satisfaction with treatment will be assessed with self-report instruments developed by the investigators and found reliable.
Analysis: In addition to descriptive statistics, hierarchical linear models and latent growth curve modeling will be used to address the objectives. The analysis will be repeated for participants who did and did not report cardiovascular diseases at baseline.
Conditions
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Keywords
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
FACTORIAL
TREATMENT
NONE
Study Groups
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Stimulus Control Instructions (SCI)
SCI is a behavioral treatment that aims to assist persons with insomnia to re-associate the bed and the bedroom with falling asleep or back to sleep, and to acquire a consistent sleep pattern. SCI entails specific instructions that focus on developing new sleep habits, such as avoiding activities other than sleep (e.g., reading, watching TV) in bed, and getting out of bed if unable to fall asleep and engaging in quiet activities until sleepy.
A trained therapist will deliver the session in which the following topics will be covered: education about sleep, factors that influence sleep, behaviors that promote or interfere with sleep, and SCI. The session will be offered in a small group (4-6) format, based on availability of participants and to avoid any delay in treatment receipt.
Stimulus Control Instructions and Sleep Restriction Therapy
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Sleep Restriction Therapy (SRT)
SRT aims at consolidating sleep by limiting sleep to a specified time and restricting the amount of time spent in bed. Sleep time is individualized based on the persons' sleep needs, and the sleep-wake schedule is planned to fit the persons' lifestyle. The sleep-wake schedule is changed to accommodate improvements in the persons' sleep, over time.. A trained therapist will deliver the session in which the following topics will be covered: education about sleep, factors that influence sleep, behaviors that promote or interfere with sleep, and SRT. The session will be offered in a small group (4-6) format, based on availability of participants and to avoid any delay in treatment receipt.
Stimulus Control Instructions and Sleep Restriction Therapy
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No therapy
No behavioral therapy for the management of insomnia is provided. However, a list of general recommendations and suggestions are provided to participants.
No interventions assigned to this group
Interventions
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Stimulus Control Instructions and Sleep Restriction Therapy
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
1. are community-dwelling, non-institutionalized middle-aged or older adults (\> 40 years of age),
2. have the ability to read and write English (required for providing written consent), and
3. complain of difficulty initiating and/or maintaining sleep, manifested in sleep onset latency and/or time awake after sleep onset of 30 minutes or more per night, for a minimum of 3 nights per week, for a duration of at least 6 weeks (NIH, 2005), ascertained with relevant questions of the Insomnia Interview Schedule (Morin, 1993).
Persons with insomnia will be selected if their insomnia is primary (i.e., not related to any other condition), or comorbid associated with pre-existing cardiovascular disease, anxiety, and depression only.
Exclusion Criteria
2. confirmed medical diagnosis and current treatment for sleep apnea as reported by participants; SCI and SRT are not recommended for sleep apnea.
40 Years
ALL
Yes
Sponsors
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Toronto Metropolitan University
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Souraya Sidani
Professor and Canada Research Chair
Principal Investigators
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Dr. Souraya Sidani, PhD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Toronto Metropolitan University
References
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Ibrahim S, Sidani S. Preferences for behavioral therapies for chronic insomnia. Health 5(11): 1784-1790, 2013.
Sidani S, Fox M, Streiner DL, Miranda J, Fredericks S, Epstein DR. Examining the influence of treatment preferences on attrition, adherence and outcomes: a protocol for a two-stage partially randomized trial. BMC Nurs. 2015 Nov 9;14:57. doi: 10.1186/s12912-015-0108-4. eCollection 2015.
Related Links
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Related Info
Other Identifiers
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PCR - 101411
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id