Parkinson's Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Treatments for Insomnia in Patients With Parkinson's Disease: A Pilot Study
Verified date | April 2015 |
Source | McGill University Health Center |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | Canada: Health Canada |
Study type | Interventional |
More than half of patients with Parkinson's have troubles with insomnia. There are several
treatment options for insomnia that have been studied in the general population - however,
the investigators don't know if these treatments work for patients with Parkinson's. It is
possible that people with Parkinson's may have different treatment responses.
The goal of this project is to test in a pilot study the tolerability and effectiveness of
pharmacologic and non-pharmacologic treatments to improve insomnia in patients with
Parkinson's disease. Each participant in this study will be wearing a wrist actigrapch and
fill out the sleep diary. Three main treatment strategies will be tested: Placebo Light
therapy, Cognitive behavioural therapy and active light therapy, and insomnia medications.
The treatment that each person will receive first will be chosen randomly. If the first
therapy has not been effective, participant may choose to re-enrol in the trial with one of
the remaining two therapies.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 20 |
Est. completion date | December 2012 |
Est. primary completion date | December 2012 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | Both |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - All patients will be recruited from the Movement Disorder Clinics at the McGill University Health Center. - Patients will be eligible for inclusion if they have a diagnosis of idiopathic PD and suffer from insomnia, defined as an SCOPA-sleep nocturnal subscore of >7. - The insomnia must have been persistent for at least 6 months (by patient self-report). - The subjects must speak either English or French sufficiently to fill out questionnaires. Exclusion Criteria: 1. Use of sedative medications at night (including sedating antidepressants). Patients may be taking non-sedating antidepressants if dose is stable for 1 month. 2. Untreated restless legs syndrome, night shift work, occupational causes of abnormal sleep pattern, or other reversible causes of insomnia detected upon baseline clinical interview. If treatment of a potentially-reversible cause is unsuccessful and insomnia is persistent >3 months following treatment initiation, patients can be enrolled. 3. Insomnia is not secondary to suboptimal dopaminergic therapy. If changes to dopaminergic therapy are required after clinical interview, patients can still be eligible for inclusion if insomnia is persistent >3 months. 4. Pre-menopausal women who are not using effective methods of birth control (note that only a small minority of women with PD are pre-menopausal, so the effects of this exclusion criterion in creating gender imbalance should be minimal). 5. Dementia, defined according to PD dementia criteria as MMSE <26/30 and ADL impairment secondary to cognitive loss, or inability to understand consent process. 6. Change to dopaminergic therapy over the preceding three months. 7. Patients with very severe PD, defined as Hoehn and Yahr of 5 (i.e. nonambulatory). Provision of sleep hygiene measures, etiology of insomnia, and potential confounds in interpretation of actigraphy in immobile patients is problematic in very advanced stages of PD. 8. Insomnia is related to untreated moderate-severe depression or anxiety. Beck depression score > 20i.e, moderate depression). |
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Subject), Primary Purpose: Treatment
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Canada | Montreal General Hospital | Montreal | Quebec |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
McGill University Health Center |
Canada,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | SCOPA sleep scale | The SCOPA sleep scale is a disease-specific measure that has been designed to assess sleep in PD. It is divided into two sections which address occurrence of nighttime sleep problems and daytime sleepiness in PD over the past month. It has been recommended as a scale of choice for evaluation of insomnia by the Movement Disorders Task Force for Sleep assessment in PD. A nocturnal subscale score of >7 was proposed as a cutoff to define poor sleep, based upon the global sleep assessment, a cutoff confirmed in a subsequent study. | 6 weeks | No |
Primary | Actigraphy | Actigraphs are motion sensing devices the size of a wristwatch, which are constantly worn by the patient. Absence of physical activity for a prolonged interval is interpreted as onset of sleep The actigraph used will be the ActiWatch Spectrum (Philips Respironics). The primary outcomes of interest with actigraphy will be total sleep time, sleep efficiency, wake after sleep onset, sleep fragmentation, and duration and number of naps (sleep onset latency will also be assessed, but will be supplemented mainly with diary, since onset latency is not reliably assessed with actigraphy). | 6 weeks | No |
Secondary | Daily sleep dairy | Daily sleep dairy is a standard assessment procedure in insomnia treatment research to collect descriptive sleep data. It is a very practical and cost-effective method for assessing insomnia when repeated measurements are needed. The following items are normally included in sleep diaries: bedtime, arising time, sleep latency, number and duration of awakenings, sleep duration, naps, medication intake, and others. | 6 weeks | Yes |
Secondary | Insomnia severity Index (ISI) | This brief self-report instrument measures the patient's perception of his insomnia. It has been selected as one of the non PD-specific measures used for insomnia. The questionnaire includes 7 items that evaluate the severity of sleep initiation, the sleep maintenance, and other aspects related to insomnia. This instrument has been extensively validated in the general population. | 6 weeks | No |
Secondary | Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) | This self-rated extensively-validated questionnaire contains 19 items that are divided into seven components: subjective sleep quality, sleep latency, sleep duration, habitual sleep efficiency, sleep disturbances, use of sleeping medication, and daytime dysfunction. It also tracks use of sleep medications. It is perhaps the most commonly used non-disease-specific measure of sleep quality. | 6 weeks | No |
Secondary | Parkinson's Disease Sleep Scale (PDSS) | This questionnaire is a visual analogue scale assessing 15 features of sleep disturbance in patients with PD. It addresses overall quality of sleep, sleep onset and maintenance insomnia, nocturnal restlessness, nocturnal psychosis, nocturia, nocturnal motor symptoms, sleep refreshment, and daytime dozing. This questionnaire has been validated with PD patients. The PDSS is useful to asses overall nocturnal sleep quality in patients with PD. Its inclusion of items such as nocturnal motor symptoms and nocturia also allows it to assess potential reversible causes of insomnia. | 6 weeks | No |
Secondary | Clinical global impression of change | Completed by both the examiner and the patient, the scale is a single question about insomnia severity that is scored as very much improved (6), much improved (5), minimally improved (4), no change (3), minimally worse (2), much worse (1), or very much worse (0). | 6 weeks | Yes |
Secondary | The Krupp Fatigue Severity Scale | The fatigue severity scale measures impact of fatigue with a 9-item questionnaire, with a 7-point Likert scale for each question. It has been validated, and has been used in PD studies, including trials of excessive daytime somnolence. | 6 weeks | No |
Secondary | Beck depression index | The Beck Depression Inventory is a self-administered scale of 21 items (scored 0-3) which assesses depression symptoms. The Beck Inventory is one of the most commonly-used scales for depression in PD, and a recent consensus panel of the Movement Disorders Society concluded it was a scale of first choice for assessing depression in PD. | 6 weeks | No |
Secondary | Adherence to treatment | The compliance will be assessed by numerous measures. Compliance with medical therapy will be conducted by pill counts, to compare numbers of pills prescribed and taken. Compliance with sleep hygiene measures will be assessed by sleep diary and actigraphy. Compliance with light therapy will be assessed using actigraphy, which contains a light sensor. | 6 weeks | No |
Secondary | Severity of motor manifestations (UPDRS) | This is the standard scale used for grading severity of PD. It consists of a systematic history assessing problems with motor function, cognition, psychiatric state, and side effects of medications, as well as examination rating features of PD. The UPDRS Part III examination component will be performed in the medication 'on' state at each clinical visit UPDRS Part IV will be recorded and coded separately for fluctuations and dyskinesia. Total 'off' time (in hours) will be also recorded, as assessed by clinical interview. | 6 weeks | No |
Secondary | Quality of life (PDQ-39) | The Parkinson's Disease Questionnaire is a quality of life index for PD. It consists of a 39-item questionnaire that asks about the impact of PD on a person's motor function, gait, mood, cognition, and activities of daily living. | 6 weeks | No |
Secondary | Adverse events | Adverse events will be queried by means of a semi structured interview - "Have you had any side effects?". The open-ended - question to researcher will be asked - "Do you think this related? Is it a serious adverse event?" That will be scored as mild =1, moderate =2 or severe=3. | 6 weeks | Yes |
Secondary | Sleep Hygiene Index | This self-administered instrument contains 13 items related to diagnostic criteria for inadequate sleep hygiene according to the International Classification of Sleep Disorders. This instrument is primarily used to determine the causes of insomnia - high scores indicate more maladaptive sleep hygiene practices. The Sleep Hygiene Index has been validated in the general population and has been found to be a reliable instrument. | 6 weeks | No |
Secondary | Dysfunctional Beliefs and Attitudes about Sleep, a brief version ( DBAS 16) | This is 16 -item self-reported questionnaire designed to evaluate various sleep/insomnia-related cognitions. These domains include expectations about sleep requirements, attributions of the causes and appraisals of the consequences of insomnia, and issues of worry and helplessness about insomnia. The DBAS -16 has been validated and has been found to be a reliable scale. | 6 weeks | No |
Secondary | Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS) | This is a scale for measurement of the level of daytime sleepiness. The short questionnaire asks the subject to rate his or her probability of falling asleep on a scale of increasing probability from 0 to 3 for eight different situations. | 6 weeks | No |
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