Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders Clinical Trial
Official title:
Telemedicine Management of Veterans With PTSD and Chronic Insomnia
Insomnia is commonly present in Veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Treatment of insomnia with a specialized type of psychotherapy has been shown to be more effective than treatment with medications. Unfortunately, few psychologists are trained to provide this treatment, limiting Veterans' access to care, especially those Veterans in remote and rural areas. This project will evaluate the ability to deliver this psychotherapy to groups of Veterans by video teleconferencing. Groups of Veterans with PTSD and chronic insomnia will receive the psychotherapy treatment either by meeting in-person with the psychologist or by the psychologist delivering the treatment by video teleconferencing. Finding that video teleconferencing is a cost effective way to deliver this treatment could add an important new component to the care of Veterans with PTSD that provides an alternative to medications.
Objectives(s): The investigators are conducting a randomized, controlled trial of Veterans
with PTSD and chronic insomnia to determine if cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia
(CBT-I) administered by video teleconferencing is not clinically inferior to in-person
treatment in terms of improvement in insomnia symptoms. Secondary aims are 1) comparing the
differences in cost and quality-adjusted life years between the treatment delivery approaches
and 2) determining the effectiveness of CBT-I on functional outcomes, sleep quality, and
non-sleep-related PTSD symptoms. The investigators are also conducting a patient- and
provider-focused formative evaluation of CBT-I delivery by video teleconferencing to assess
potential barriers to its widespread implementation.
Research Design: This prospective randomized controlled non-inferiority study will determine
if Veterans with PTSD and chronic insomnia receiving CBT-I by video teleconferencing have an
improvement in insomnia severity, as determined by change in Insomnia Severity Index (ISI)
score, that is not clinically inferior to that in Veterans receiving in-person CBT-I.
Differences in cost and quality-adjusted life years (QALY) between groups will also be
compared.
Methodology: Veterans with PTSD and chronic insomnia receiving their primary care at
community-based outpatient clinics (CBOC) affiliated with the Philadelphia VAMC are be
randomized to receive one of the following interventions in a group setting at their CBOC: 1)
a manual-based CBT-I program delivered via video teleconferencing, 2) the CBT-I program
delivered in-person, and 3) in-person delivery of sleep hygiene education, a known active
control intervention. Participants are assessed at baseline, and 2 weeks and every 3 months
following the intervention. The primary outcome measure in Aim 1 is the change in the
Insomnia Severity Index (ISI) score at 6 months following intervention. Non-inferiority
analysis will be used to compare the effectiveness of the two delivery methods, with a
pre-specified margin. Results will be ascertained via intent to treat and per-protocol
procedures. The investigators hypothesize that the change in ISI score following CBT-I by
video teleconferencing will not be clinically inferior to that following in-person delivery.
In Aim 2, VA and non-VA total healthcare costs are being collected to test whether average
cost is lower for Veterans receiving CBT-I by video teleconferencing versus in-person care.
Preference is being assessed by the EuroQol and Health Utilities Index 2. Differences in the
ratio of cost and quality-adjusted life years saved between CBT-I by video teleconferencing
and in-person encounter will be compared to test the hypothesis that video teleconferencing
will have lower cost and equivalent outcomes. Aim 3 is assessing the effect of CBT-I on
functional outcomes (Short Form-12, Work and Social Adjustment Scale), sleep quality
(Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index, sleep diary and wrist actigraphy), and PTSD severity (the
non-sleep component of the PTSD Checklist-Military). The investigators hypothesize that these
functional outcomes and sleep quality measures will improve following each method of CBT-I
delivery and that CBT-I will improve non-sleep-related PTSD severity. The formative
evaluation of the telemedicine delivery of CBT-I in Aim 4 is using qualitative (targeted
focus groups with participants and therapist interviews) and quantitative measures (Work
Alliance Inventory, Treatment Credibility Scale, attrition) that will help guide future
implementation of CBT-I by video teleconferencing
Anticipated Findings: The investigators believe these results will demonstrate that: 1)
Veterans in both CBT-I groups will have similar improvement in functional outcomes, and 2)
treatment delivery by video teleconferencing will be more cost effective than in-person care.
These findings should lead to wider acceptance of video teleconferencing, thereby increasing
patient access to care and reducing treatment costs.
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