Delayed Sleep Phase Syndrome Clinical Trial
Official title:
Does CBT Improve the Effect of Light Therapy in Delayed Sleep Phase Syndrome Compared to Only Light Therapy - Short and Long Term Follow up
Delayed sleep phase syndrome (DSPS) is the most common of the circadian rhythm sleep
disorders (CRSD). A person with DSPS have sufficient sleep quality, but their circadian
clock is delayed compared to the normal 24-h period. They fall asleep around 03.00-04.00 at
night and sleeps until 02.00-03.00 in the afternoon. This syndrome is most frequent among
young people between 16-25 years, which conveys that school attendance and education are
affected, and also often results in severe social consequences. DSPS is sometimes associated
with depression and personality disorders and may aggravate psychiatric symptoms.
This syndrome is highly underdiagnosed and there are no detailed guidelines how to treat it.
The treatment usually consists of light therapy, chronotherapy or melatonin. There is a lack
of guidelines how often, with which wavelength, and how long the treatment of DSPS patients
shall go on. Previous studies shows that light therapy often is effective. The effect gets
even better if melatonin is administered concurrently. However, the frequency of relapse is
high.
Thus, DSPS is a prevalent syndrome in young adults with severe consequences on normal
daytime functioning. There are almost no treatment options available in health care
settings. There is a clear need for further studies on this topic. The main purpose of the
present study is to evaluate the clinical effects of short and long-term treatment by using
light therapy and cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT). CBT is recommended at mild to moderate
depression and anxiety. It also has some evidence in treating insomnia. Patients with DSPS
often have al of these symptoms and therefore the investigators would like to investigate if
CBT can enhance the effect of light therapy.
Firstly, the investigators want to evaluate the short-term effects of light therapy with and
without CBT. Secondly, the investigators want to evaluate if the patients who get CBT
maintain a "normal" sleep rhythm and prevent relapse of DSPS compared to just light therapy
for two weeks.
The investigators also want to evaluate how this patient-group differs when it comes to
behavioral factors compared to a matched reference group.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 57 |
Est. completion date | April 2013 |
Est. primary completion date | April 2013 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | Both |
Age group | 16 Years to 26 Years |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Clinical diagnosis of delayed sleep phase syndrome. Exclusion Criteria: - Eye diseases - Active psychiatric disorder. - Ongoing somatic disorder. |
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Sweden | Sleep department | Uppsala |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Uppsala University | Uppsala County Council, Sweden |
Sweden,
Benloucif S, Burgess HJ, Klerman EB, Lewy AJ, Middleton B, Murphy PJ, Parry BL, Revell VL. Measuring melatonin in humans. J Clin Sleep Med. 2008 Feb 15;4(1):66-9. — View Citation
Bjorvatn B, Pallesen S. A practical approach to circadian rhythm sleep disorders. Sleep Med Rev. 2009 Feb;13(1):47-60. doi: 10.1016/j.smrv.2008.04.009. Epub 2008 Oct 8. Review. — View Citation
Dagan Y, Yovel I, Hallis D, Eisenstein M, Raichik I. Evaluating the role of melatonin in the long-term treatment of delayed sleep phase syndrome (DSPS). Chronobiol Int. 1998 Mar;15(2):181-90. — View Citation
Gooley JJ. Treatment of circadian rhythm sleep disorders with light. Ann Acad Med Singapore. 2008 Aug;37(8):669-76. Review. — View Citation
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Does DLMO correlate with sleep diary | A part of a second study. About the importance of DLMO. Since DLMO has been measured in this patient group at baseline | baseline | No |
Other | Is DLMO important for setting the time to start light therapy | Is a sleep diary enough or is DLMO important to decide the time to start Light therapy in the morning. | From baseline to 2 weeks | No |
Other | Is scores in MEQ important to decide when to start light therapy in the morning. | Is scores in MEQ important to decide when to start light therapy in the morning. and are scores in MEQ correlated with DLMO and sleep diary | from baseline to 2 weeks of Light therapy | No |
Primary | Change from baseline in sleep-diary at 6 months. | That the patients will go to bed before 01:00 and wake up not later than 09:00 a.m. or earlier. | Change from baseline in sleep-diary at 6 months. | No |
Secondary | Changes from baseline in sleep-diary at 6 weeks. | That the patients will go to bed before 01:00 and wake up not later than 09:00 a.m. or earlier. | Changes from baseline in sleep diary at 6 weeks. | No |
Secondary | Change from baseline in Hospital anxiety-depression scale at 2 weeks | By comparing the results of the questionnaires before study start, during and after study completion. Knowledge about this patient group will provide clinical routines to treat patients with DSPS. The results will also be compared with a matched reference-group. | Change from baseline in Hospital anxiety-depression scale at 2 weeks | No |
Secondary | Change from baseline in Hospital anxiety-depression scale at 6 weeks | By comparing the results of the questionnaires before study start, during and after study completion. Knowledge about this patient group will provide clinical routines to treat patients with DSPS. The results will also be compared with a matched reference-group. | Change from baseline in Hospital anxiety-depression scale at 6 weeks | No |
Secondary | Change from baseline in Hospital anxiety-depression scale at 6 months | By comparing the results of the questionnaires before study start, during and after study completion. Knowledge about this patient group will provide clinical routines to treat patients with DSPS. The results will also be compared with a matched reference-group. | Change from baseline in Hospital anxiety-depression scale at 6 months | No |
Secondary | Change from baseline in Insomnia Severity Scale at 2 weeks | By comparing the results of the questionnaires before study start, during and after study completion. Knowledge about this patient group will provide clinical routines to treat patients with DSPS. The results will also be compared with a matched reference-group. | Change from baseline in Insomnia Severity Scale at 2 weeks | No |
Secondary | Change from baseline in Insomnia Severity Scale at 6 weeks | By comparing the results of the questionnaires before study start, during and after study completion. Knowledge about this patient group will provide clinical routines to treat patients with DSPS. The results will also be compared with a matched reference-group. | Change from baseline in Insomnia Severity Scale at 6 weeks | No |
Secondary | Change from baseline in Insomnia Severity Scale at 6 months | By comparing the results of the questionnaires before study start, during and after study completion. Knowledge about this patient group will provide clinical routines to treat patients with DSPS. The results will also be compared with a matched reference-group. | Change from baseline in Insomnia Severity Scale at 6 months | No |
Secondary | Change from baseline in Epworth Sleepiness Scale at 2 weeks | By comparing the results of the questionnaires before study start, during and after study completion. Knowledge about this patient group will provide clinical routines to treat patients with DSPS. The results will also be compared with a matched reference-group. | Change from baseline in Epworth Sleepiness Scale at 2 weeks | No |
Secondary | Change from baseline in Epworth Sleepiness Scale at 6 weeks | By comparing the results of the questionnaires before study start, during and after study completion, knowledge about this patient group will provide clinical routines to treat patients with DSPS. The results will also be compared with a matched reference-group. | Change from baseline in Epworth Sleepiness Scale at 6 weeks | No |
Secondary | Change from baseline in Epworth Sleepiness Scale at 6 months | By comparing the results of the questionnaires before study start, during and after study completion. Knowledge about this patient group will provide clinical routines to treat patients with DSPS. The results will also be compared with a matched reference-group. | Change from baseline in Epworth Sleepiness Scale at 6 months | No |
Secondary | Change from baseline in Penn State Worry Questionnaire at 6 months | By comparing the results of the questionnaire before study start and after study completion. Knowledge about this patient group will provide clinical routines to treat patients with DSPS. The results will also be compared with a matched reference-group. | Change from baseline in Penn State Worry Questionnaire at 6 months | No |
Secondary | Change from baseline in Symptom-focused Rumination Scale at 6 months | By comparing the results of the questionnaire before study start and after study completion. Knowledge about this patient group will provide clinical routines to treat patients with DSPS. The results will also be compared with a matched reference-group. | Change from baseline in Symptom-focused Rumination Scale at 6 months | No |
Secondary | Change from baseline in Brief COPE at 6 months | By comparing the results of the questionnaire before study start and after study completion. Knowledge about this patient group's coping strategies will provide clinical routines to treat patients with DSPS. The results will also be compared with a matched reference-group. | Change from baseline in Brief COPE at 6 months | No |
Secondary | Change from baseline in sleep-diary at 2 weeks | That the patients will go to bed before 01:00 and wake up not later than 09:00 a.m. or earlier | Change from baseline in sleep-diary at 2 weeks | No |
Secondary | Number of participants that will keep their new sleep-timings. | We want to measure how many participants that can keep their new sleep-timings after the first treatment (6 weeks). We believe that CBT or light-therapy intermittently can help these patients to avoid relapses | 6 months | No |
Secondary | Change from baseline in Horne-Ostberg Morning-Eveningness Questionnaire at 6 months | By comparing the results of the questionnaire before study start and after study completion. Knowledge about this patient group will provide clinical routines to treat patients with DSPS. The results will also be compared with a matched reference-group. | Change from baseline in Horne-Ostberg Morning-Eveningness Questionnaire at 6 months | No |
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