View clinical trials related to Insomnia, Secondary.
Filter by:There is an unmet medical need for monitoring sleep for multiple nights in a patient's home, without the inconvenience of traveling and staying overnight in a medical center, and without the need for a technician to set up a polysomnography (PSG) device at the patient's home. Several disorders, and particularly sleep disorders, are associated with insomnia symptoms, and longitudinal sleep assessment may support a better understanding and management of these patients, who currently seldom access sleep lab PSG. On one hand, this study aims at demonstrating whether the final device's user interface supports safe and effective use when being used at home over multiple nights. On the other, the study aims at confirming that stable and consistent data are measured in the device's actual use, for the records to be clinically usable in daily practice.
The proposed study is a randomized, parallel-group, placebo-controlled, subject- and assessor-blind trial. It is designed according to CONSORT and STRICTA recommendations. The 138 subjects will be randomly assigned to one of the two arms using block randomization in a 1:1 ratio: (I) acupuncture treatment, and (II) sham treatment. In groups (I) and (II), acupuncture or sham acupuncture treatment will be given twice a week for 6 weeks (12 sessions). A maintenance tapering treatment schedule will then be applied once per month for 3 months (3 sessions). The primary outcome will be improvement in sleep quality as measured by the change of ISI after 6 weeks of treatment. Secondary outcome assessment tools will include PSQI, HADS, BPI, BFI, FACT-B, sleep diaries, drug diaries, blinding success questionnaire and reports of adverse events. The subjects will be scheduled for on-site follow-up assessments at 3 and 6 months after the last treatment. An intention to treat (ITT) approach will be used for data analysis.
This pilot study is designed to determine whether acupuncture is a feasible, effective and safe method for alleviating insomnia among breast cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy as compared with a wait-list control.