Efficacy of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia to Treat Insomnia Symptoms and Fatigue in Individuals With Multiple Sclerosis
University of Kansas Medical Center
Summary
The incidence of insomnia is estimated to be as high as 90% in individuals with MS due to insomnia being underdiagnosed. Sleep disturbances in people with MS have been associated with reduced cognitive performance, physical function, psychological well-being, quality of life, and occupational function, as well as increased prevalence of fatigue, pain, depression, and anxiety. The objective of the proposed study is to determine the efficacy of cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I) to improve insomnia symptoms (Aim 1) fatigue, and health-related quality of life (Aim 2) in individuals with multiple sclerosis compared to an active control group, and to determine the characteristics of participants that predict improvement in sleep outcomes (Exploratory Aim 3).
Eligibility
- Age range
- 18–65 years
- Sex
- All
- Healthy volunteers
- No
Inclusion Criteria: * 18-65 years old * Diagnosis of relapsing-remitting or secondary progressive MS based on established guidelines20 and verified by their neurologist * Mild-to-moderately severe disability (≤ 6 on Patient Determined Disability Steps (PDDS) scale) * Report of difficulty falling asleep, maintaining sleep, or waking up too early at least 3 nights/week for the past 3 months with significant distress and impact on function despite adequate opportunity for sleep and not due to other sleep disorders as indicated in the DSM-5 * ≥10 on Insomnia Severity Index * English speaking * ≥3…
Interventions
- BehavioralCognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia
The general sessions outlines are as follows with each session: Session 1: determine treatment plan, set up sleep schedule and stimulus control, discuss strategies for how to stay awake to prescribed hour and what to do if wake up in middle of night, sleep hygiene education Session 2: continue upward titration of total sleep time, review sleep hygiene; introduce diaphragmatic breathing Session 3: continue upward titration of total sleep time, introduce mindfulness Session 4: continue upward titration of total sleep time, introduce progressive muscle relaxation Session 5: continue upward titration of total sleep time, discuss negative sleep beliefs Session 6: assess global treatment gains, discuss relapse prevention
- BehavioralSleep and lifestyle education
The general sessions outlines are as follows with each session: Session 1: Basic sleep education, stretching exercises Session 2: Sleep hygiene education (environmental factors \& sleep positions), stretching exercises Session 3: Sleep hygiene education (lifestyle factors), stretching exercises Session 4: Diet recommendations, stretching exercises Session 5: Exercises recommendations, stretching exercises Session 6: Discus maintaining achievements \& preventing relapses, stretching exercises
Location
- University of Kansas Medical CenterKansas City, Kansas