Chronic Insomnia Clinical Trial
Official title:
Mindfulness Versus Pharmacotherapy for Chronic Insomnia: A Pilot Study
Chronic insomnia is a major public health problem that affects about 10% of adults and is associated with serious and distressful health consequences such as depression, anxiety and reduced quality of life. Sleep medications are effective, but side effects, costs and uncertain long term efficacy call for non-pharmacologic alternatives. Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR), a standardized program of training in mindfulness meditation and yoga, is a promising new approach for treating chronic insomnia. MBSR was developed to facilitate adaptation to the stressors of medical illness. It is hypothesized that mindfulness training reduces arousal and unhelpful cognitions that promote and sustain chronic insomnia. The Mindfulness Versus Pharmacotherapy trial (MVP#1) is a pilot study designed to establish the feasibility and determine the optimal design for a full-scale trial comparing MBSR to prescribed sleep medication for treatment of chronic insomnia. For this pilot, we will randomize persons with primary chronic insomnia (actual sample of 30 persons) to 2 groups : 1) MBSR (8-weeks of group instruction followed by 3-months of home practice); and 2) PCT (3 mg of LUNESTA(eszopiclone) nightly for 8-weeks followed by 3-months of "as needed" use). Both groups will have telephone monitoring for side effects, adherence tracking, and objective sleep assessment by actigraphy. The primary outcomes are sleep quality, sleep quantity and insomnia severity assessed by well-validated self-report scales, objective sleep parameters measured by wrist actigraphy, depression and anxiety symptoms, health-related quality of life and workplace productivity. We hypothesize that those in the MBSR group will have improved sleep outcomes. Outcomes will be assessed at 8-weeks (the end of the active intervention phase) and 5 months follow-up. Outcomes will be compared to baseline values and measures reflecting proposed mechanisms of action to determine if clinically important impacts are likely to be obtainable in a full-scale trial. After follow-up data have been collected, participants will be invited to participate in focus groups to share their impressions of the study interventions to identify issues that could be addressed in a full-scale trial. Our long-range goal is to provide evidence-based recommendations for safe, practical and cost-effective non-pharmacologic treatment options for chronic insomnia.
The NIH's 2003 National Sleep Disorders Research Plan defines insomnia as "difficulty
falling asleep, difficulty staying asleep or short sleep duration, despite adequate
opportunity for sleep," and estimates that it affects 30% to 40% of adults. The prevalence
of chronic insomnia, defined as sleep disturbances for 4 weeks or more, sleep disruption
with daytime impairment, or regular, nightly sleep difficulty, is about 10% of the general
population, with higher rates among women, older adults and clinical populations. Total
direct and indirect costs of insomnia are estimated to be roughly $113 billion annually.
While only about 3 million of the 70 million Americans with insomnia take prescription
medications, annual prescription drug costs for insomnia exceed $2.1 billion dollars.
Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR), a standardized group program of training in
mindfulness meditation and yoga, is a promising intervention for lifelong self-management of
chronic insomnia. Mindfulness meditation training has been found to improve sleep outcomes
in patients with chronic illnesses. Meditation may be defined as self-regulation of
attention, and mindfulness has been described as paying attention in a particular,
intentional way, moment-by-moment, without judging. MBSR originated with the Stress
Reduction Clinic at the University of Massachusetts Medical Center and is currently used in
over 250 clinics, hospitals, and health maintenance organizations in the US and abroad
(www.umassmed.edu/cfm/srp/).
MVP#1 is a pilot study to establish feasibility, refine procedures and determine the optimal
design for a planned full-scale trial. An active control drug, eszopiclone which is a widely
used and FDA approved prescription sleep medication, is included in the pilot to provide a
benchmark for efficacy. Outcomes will evaluated to determine if clinically important impacts
are likely to be obtainable in the future full-scale trial.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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