Fatigue Clinical Trial
— Mars 105Official title:
Operational Evaluation of a Photic Countermeasure to Improve Alertness, Performance, and Mood During Nightshift Work on a 105-day Simulated Human Exploration Mission to Mars
Verified date | April 2015 |
Source | Brigham and Women's Hospital |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | United States: Institutional Review Board |
Study type | Interventional |
The success of human expedition missions critically depend on the ability of the crew to be
alert and maintain high levels of cognitive function while operating complex, technical
equipment. Optimal human health, performance and safety during space flight requires
sufficient sleep and synchrony between the circadian pacemaker—which regulates the timing of
sleep, endocrine function, alertness and performance—and the timing of the imposed
sleep-wake schedule.
Crewmembers of the 105-day simulation study will be required to work one night shift every
sixth night. This schedule will likely result in sleep loss and circadian misalignment,
especially when lighting conditions are similar to those that crewmembers experience during
spaceflight. External mission controllers will work 24-hour shifts, also resulting in both
sleep loss and circadian misalignment.
It has been well documented in laboratory and field studies that both working the night
shift and working extended duration shifts result in decrement alertness, performance and
mood. In addition to the negative effects that night shift work has on alertness,
performance and mood, shift work causes significant short and long-term health problems.
Shift workers, particularly night shift workers who invert their normal sleep/wake schedule,
suffer for several reasons. First, their endogenous circadian rhythms and the imposed
sleep/work schedule are typically out of phase. This is similar to the experience of jet
lag. However, while environment cues (e.g., sunrise, sunset, the timing of meals and sleep)
enable travelers to adapt quickly to a new time zone, crewmembers in the 105-day simulation
will be unable to do so because they will only spend one night of every five working. When
working the night shift, the timing of meals, work, and sleep will therefore be out of phase
with the normal entrained phase of the circadian timing system. Ingestion of meals at an
inappropriate circadian phase results in impaired metabolism, likely underlying the
gastrointestinal and metabolic problems experienced by shift workers. Second, this circadian
misalignment leads to a substantial loss of sleep efficiency during the (daytime) sleep
period, independent of, and in addition to, environmental obstacles to sleep (e.g., noise,
light, other crewmembers). Third, misalignment of circadian phase coupled with sleep loss
will each result in deterioration of alertness and impairment of performance during the
night. Since these adverse effects are particularly acute on the first night of work, the
plan for crewmembers on the Mars 105 mission to work the midnight shift every sixth night
will subject them repeatedly to the performance impairments associated with acute circadian
misalignment and acute sleep deprivation.
Lighting Countermeasure. Our group at the Harvard Medical School has successfully developed
and tested effective photic countermeasures to alleviate circadian misalignment and improve
alertness, performance and mood in night shift workers. The most effective countermeasure to
circadian alignment is appropriately-timed and sufficiently intense light. Light also
acutely improves alertness, performance and mood. Most recently it has been reported that
short wavelength light has been shown to be most effective for both resetting circadian
rhythms and acutely improving performance during night work via antecedent suppression of
the soporific hormone melatonin.
These photic countermeasures have been tested in individual subjects living in laboratory
simulations (Countermeasures readiness level/Technology readiness level 7; Evaluation with
human subjects in controlled laboratory simulating operational spaceflight environment). The
next critical step is to evaluate our countermeasures in an operational simulation of space
flight that includes study of the interaction among crew members in a high fidelity
simulation (Countermeasures readiness level/Technology readiness level 8; Validation with
human subjects in actual operational spaceflight to demonstrate efficacy and operational
feasibility).
Adequate sleep and circadian alignment are critical to maintaining the health and
performance of expedition mission crewmembers. Testing of the developed lighting
countermeasure in a high fidelity operational environment imitating the conditions of a
future expedition mission (e.g., to Mars) is critical to ensure countermeasure readiness and
to reduce the risk of human performance errors due to factors related to circadian
disruption, sleep loss and fatigue. Development and testing of this photic countermeasure
for mission controllers working 24-hour shifts will further ensure the success of the future
long duration expedition missions.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 25 |
Est. completion date | December 2013 |
Est. primary completion date | June 2013 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | Both |
Age group | 18 Years to 64 Years |
Eligibility |
The Institute of Biomedical Problems (IBMP) selected the participants for the 105-day
simulated spaceflight mission. All participants that were selected by the IBMP were
eligible to participate in this study. Inclusion - Any individual chosen by the Institute of Biomedical Problems to participate in or support the space flight simulation study was eligible to participate in the study. Exclusion - None. Any individual chosen by the Institute of Biomedical Problems to participate in or support the space flight simulation study was eligible to participate in the study. |
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Crossover Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Russian Federation | Institute of Biomedical Problems in Moscow | Moscow |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Brigham and Women's Hospital | National Space Biomedical Research Institute, The Institute of Biomedical Problems, University of Pennsylvania |
Russian Federation,
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* Note: There are 37 references in all — Click here to view all references
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | performance on variety of cognitive tasks (e.g., psychomotor vigilance task, digit symbol substitution task) | During the 105-day isolation | No | |
Primary | sleep, measured with actigraphy | During the 105-day isolation | No | |
Primary | circadian phase | During the 105-day isolation | No | |
Primary | subjective alertness | During the 105-day isolation | No |
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