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Managing Sleep-wake Disruption Due to Hospitalisation: the Circadian Care Project

Not Applicable
Recruiting
Conditions
Circadian Rhythm Disorders
Interventions
Behavioral: CircadianCare
Registration Number
NCT05228444
Lead Sponsor
University Hospital Padova
Brief Summary

Sleep is regulated by the interaction of homeostatic and circadian processes. The homeostatic process determines sleep propensity in relation to sleep-wake history, the circadian one is responsible for the alternation of high/low sleep propensity in relation to dark/light cues, and is substantially independent of preceding sleep-wake behaviour. The circadian timing system encompasses a master clock in the brain and peripheral, ancillary time-keepers in virtually every organ of the body.

In recent years, evidence has emerged that circadian disruption has serious medical consequences, including sleep loss, increased cardiovascular morbidity and increased risk of certain types of cancer. Evidence is also emerging that hospitalization per se weakens circadian rhythmicity, due to disease itself and to modified light, food and activity cues.

The aim of our project is to test an inpatient management system (CircadianCare) that limits the circadian impact of hospitalisation by enhancing circadian rhythmicity through an assessment of the patient's specific circadian features/needs and an ad hoc, personalized light-dark, meal and activity schedule to cover the whole of the inpatient stay. This will be compared to standard inpatient management in terms of patients' perception, sleep-wake quality and timing during hospitalisation, inpatient utilization of sleep-inducing medication, length of hospitalisation, and prognosis (i.e. outcome of hospitalisation, subsequent hospitalisations and post-discharge sleep-wake disturbances).

The CircadianCare system is expected to benefit prognosis, decrease costs, and change the way hospitals are organized and designed in future, with potential direct relevance to the plans for the new University Hospital of Padova.

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
50
Inclusion Criteria

• Hospitalized patients

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Exclusion Criteria

• absence of compliance

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Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
CircadiancareCircadianCarelimits the circadian impact of hospitalisation by enhancing circadian rhythmicity through an assessment of the patient's specific circadian features/needs and an ad hoc, personalized light-dark, meal and activity schedule to cover the whole of the inpatient stay.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Change in sleep onset latency - actigraphyfirst, 7th and 14 day

Sleep latency (number of minutes between try to sleep and sleep onset, SL) is objectively assessed by wrist actigraphy device. SL \> 30 min is considered clinically significant. (scale minutes)

Change in sleep onset latency - sleep diaryfirst, 7th and 14 day

The number of minutes between try to sleep and sleep onset as measured by sleep diary. Sleep latency \> 30 min is considered clinically significant. (scale minutes)

Change in sleep duration - actigraphyfirst, 7th and 14 day

Total sleep time (TST) is calculated as hours per night spent sleeping while in bed after light off. It is objectively assessed by wrist actigraphy device. (scale hours)

Change in sleep duration - sleep diaryfirst, 7th and 14 day

Total sleep time (TST) is calculated as hours per night spent sleeping while in bed after light off. It is assessed using daily sleep diaries. (scale hours)

Change in sleep awakening - actigraphyfirst, 7th and 14 day

Measured with wrist actigraphy, wake after sleep onset (WASO) is the number of minutes scored as wake from sleep onset until the end of the last sleep episode while in bed. (scale minutes)

Change in sleep awakening - sleep diaryfirst, 7th and 14 day

Measured with sleep diary. Wake after sleep onset (WASO) is a subjective measure of participants' sleeping and waking times in which time awake expressed in minutes after sleep onset is obtained.

Change in sleep efficiency - actigraphyfirst, 7th and 14 day

Measured with wrist actigraphy, sleep efficiency (SE) is the percentage of time (0%-100%) the participant was sleeping from sleep onset (defined as the first 20 continuous minutes of sleep after getting into bed) until the last minute scored as sleep (the following morning).

Change in sleep efficiency - sleep diaryfirst, 7th and 14 day

Measured with sleep diary. The sleep efficiency is a subjective measure of participants' sleeping and waking times, from which sleep efficiency is computed as the quota between time sleeping/time spent in bed, expressed in percentage.

Actigraphy - change in fragmentation of activity-rest periods14 days

Interdaily variability (IV) quantifies the degree of fragmentation. The variable has a theoretical range of 0 to 2 with higher values indicating higher fragmentation. Typical values for healthy subjects will be below 1.

Actigraphy - change in sleep regularity over days14 days

Intradaily stability (IS) quantifies the degree of regularity in the activity-rest pattern with a range of 0 to 1 where a value of 0 indicates a total lack of rhythm and a value of 1 indicates a perfectly stable rhythm.

Change in daytime sleepinessfirst day then again at 7th and 14th day

Karolinska Sleepiness Scale (KSS) comprises a single item assessing state sleepiness at a particular time (every hour) during the day on a scale from 1 (very rested) to 9 (very sleepy).

Salivary melatonin shiftbaseline DLMO and then again at 7th and 14th day

A change in the timing of the circadian system is measured using the Dim Light Melatonin Onset (DLMO), gold standard for measuring human circadian phase. Salivary melatonin is measured five times every 1h before usual bedtime and assayed using standard commercially-available radioimmunoassay (RIA) kits. The time at which melatonin rises above a 4 pg/mL threshold is the DLMO.

Diurnal preferencefirst day

Short version Munich Chronotype Questionnaire (microMCTQ), measure chronotype based on the midpoint of sleep.

Assess circadian preferencefirst day

Morning-evening questionnaire (MEQ) scale: MEQ sum score, range: 16-86, participants are classified as Morning-types (scores between 59 and 86), Neither-types (scores between 42 and 58), and Evening-types (scores between 16 and 41).

Sleep qualityfirst day

Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) scale: global PSQI score, range: 0 - 21, scores of 5 or higher indicate poor sleep quality.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Monitoring environment temperaturefirst, 7th 14th day

Temperature levels within ward rooms will be monitored at regular intervals by ibutton temperature sensors, using the Celsius scale.

Monitoring environment noisefirst, 7th 14th day

Noise levels within ward rooms will be monitored at regular intervals by phonometers. Noise level is measured in decibels (dB)

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Padova University Hospital

🇮🇹

Padova, Italy

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