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Sleep to Your Heart's Content - Insomnia Intervention for Cardiac Patients

Not Applicable
Terminated
Conditions
Insomnia
Cardiovascular Diseases
Interventions
Behavioral: CBT-I
Registration Number
NCT03250468
Lead Sponsor
Ottawa Heart Institute Research Corporation
Brief Summary

Research aims:

1. To determine if participation in a group-based cognitive behavioural therapy intervention (CBT-I) intervention results in improved sleep quality.

2. To determine if participation in a group-based CBT-I intervention results in improved cardiovascular disease risk factors, and if the CBT-I intervention moderates that relationship.

Detailed Description

Cardiovascular disease affects 5% of the population and almost 20% of those meet the criteria for insomnia; twice as many as in the general population. Patients with cardiovascular disease and insomnia have been found to have elevated rates of anxiety and depression, which in turn places individuals at further cardiovascular risk via physiological pathways like increased blood pressure and/or vascular inflammation. Further, insomnia has been linked with negative health outcomes that exacerbate risk, including obesity, hypertension, and future acute myocardial infarction. Given the negative impact of poor sleep on cardiac health, some have argued that insomnia should now be included in the top 10 modifiable risk factors for cardiovascular disease.

Currently the best treatment for insomnia is a group-based cognitive behavioural therapy intervention (CBT-I); this intervention is more effective than pharmacotherapy. Evidence shows that CBT-I produces significant improvements after 6 weeks of intervention and improvements continue over the long term. This intervention program includes specific cognitive therapy exercises aimed at maladaptive thoughts about sleep, behaviour change techniques, and relaxation strategies (e.g., mindfulness, deep breathing); it also provides a supportive environment for individuals to discuss their sleep difficulties, allowing them to feel normalized and less isolated. For most people with insomnia however, their disorder goes untreated, leaving individuals at higher risk for affective disorders (e.g., depression), cardiovascular disease, and poorer quality of life. This lack of treatment is widespread and systemic; patients who want help with insomnia face a dearth of information about treatment, actual access to treatment and affordable services.

The proposed study is the first evaluation of a comprehensive CBT-I intervention designed for cardiac patients. Of note, the proposed study will be the first to evaluate the impact of this intervention on cardiovascular outcomes.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
TERMINATED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
52
Inclusion Criteria
  • Sleep disturbance as indicated by a score on the Insomnia Severity Index (ISI) of 8 or above.
  • Enrolled in the cardiac rehabilitation program offered by the University of Ottawa Heart Institute.
  • Willing to be randomized.
  • Willing to wear a monitor that tracks sleep and physical activity.
Exclusion Criteria
  • Untreated or undiagnosed obstructive sleep apnea (as per standard cardiac rehabilitation intake assessment, patients with a score of 5 or above on the STOP-BANG (a brief assessment for sleep apnea) will be referred for a sleep assessment by a cardiac rehabilitation physician).
  • Unable to converse in English (i.e., while patient materials and questionnaires will be offered in both English and French, the intervention is only offered in English).
  • Unable to provide written, informed consent.
  • Unable to attend 6 weeks of onsite CBT-I intervention.

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
CBT-ICBT-IParticipants randomized to receive the intervention will attend 6 weekly group-based CBT-I sessions. Each 90-minute group will include 6-12 participants.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Sleep QualityThrough study completion, up to 3 months

Sleep quality will be measured using the Consensus Sleep Diary.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
SleepinessThrough study completion, up to 3 months

The widely used Epworth Sleepiness Scale will be used to measure levels of sleepiness .experienced by patients

Mental HealthThrough study completion, up to 3 months

Both symptoms and severity of anxiety and depression will be measured

Sleep SymptomsThrough study completion, up to 3 months

Sleep symptoms will be measured using the Insomnia Severity Index

ActivityThrough study completion, up to 3 months

Participants will wear an ActiGraph GTX3 accelerometer (ActiGraph, Pensacola, Florida) to assess sleep and physical activity

Quality of lifeThrough study completion, up to 3 months

Patient quality of life will be measured using the 36-item short-form health survey (SF-36; version 1)

Cardiovascular Risk FactorsThrough study completion, up to 3 months

Cardiovascular disease diagnosis, fasting blood glucose concentration, triglycerides, glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c), cholesterol (High-density lipoprotein ratio

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

University of Ottawa Heart Institute

🇨🇦

Ottawa, Ontario, Canada

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