Cardiovascular Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Insomnia and Cardiovascular Diseases: Influence of Behavioral Treatments and Preferences
Research has shown that persons who have trouble sleeping and experience stress are at risk of developing heart diseases. Two treatments, called stimulus control instructions and sleep efficiency treatment, that do not involve sleeping pills, have been found effective in managing trouble sleeping. This study will be undertaken to find out if the two treatments are effective in improving sleep, and reducing stress and the risk of heart diseases. Persons with trouble sleeping may have a preference for either treatment. It is believed that if persons get the treatment they prefer, then they will be satisfied with the treatment and comply with it, and experience improvement in their sleep. This study will also examine the extent to which giving persons the treatment of their choice, as compared to giving persons treatment based on chance, will lead to higher satisfaction and compliance with treatment, and improved sleep. About 300 persons who experience trouble sleeping will be included in the study. They will be requested to complete a questionnaire and a sleep diary before and after they receive treatment, as well as 6 month and one year later.
Background and Significance: Accumulating evidence indicates that sleep quantity (low number
of sleep hours) and quality (subjective complaint of insomnia) are associated with an
increased risk of cardiovascular diseases even after controlling for other cardiovascular
risk factors. The prevalence of insomnia increases with age. Assisting middle-aged and older
adults manage insomnia is essential to promote sleep, reduce anxiety and depression, and
reduce the risk of cardiovascular diseases. Two behavioral treatments, stimulus control
instructions (SCI) and sleep restriction therapy (SRT) are established treatments for
insomnia. However, both treatments demand commitment to changing one's habits and lifestyle.
Preferences for treatment have been found to influence adherence to, and outcomes of
treatment. The study will provide experimental evidence of the extent to which improved
sleep quantity and quality reduce the risk of cardiovascular diseases, and the SCI and SRT
are effective in achieving these outcomes. The study is the first to examine satisfaction
with treatment as the mechanism mediating the influence of preferences on treatment
adherence and outcomes.
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.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Factorial Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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