ClinicalTrials.Veeva

Menu

Augmentation of Exposure Therapy for High Levels of Social Anxiety Using Post-exposure Naps (SANAP)

Mass General Brigham logo

Mass General Brigham

Status

Completed

Conditions

Sleep Laboratory
Social Anxiety Disorder

Treatments

Behavioral: Sleep-enhancement of extinction memory

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02325128
2014P001501/MGH

Details and patient eligibility

About

Investigators will examine whether post-exposure naps can be used to strengthen therapeutic extinction memories formed during exposure therapy for extreme social anxiety. Thirty-two individuals with high levels of social anxiety, evidenced by scores of 60 or greater on the Liebowitz Social Anxiety Scale, by self-report during a clinical interview and by demonstrated enhanced psychophysiological reactivity when imagining a socially stressful scenario, will be enrolled as one of four participants in one of eight successive offerings of a validated 5-session exposure-based group treatment for extreme social anxiety. The third and fourth sessions conclude with each participant delivering a speech on a topic individually chosen to elicit significant social anxiety. Following these sessions, participants will go to the sleep laboratory where two will be given a 2-hour sleep opportunity with polysomnographic (PSG) monitoring and two will be similarly instrumented but undergo 2 hours of monitored quiet wakefulness. Before and after treatment, participants will be individually assessed for social anxiety symptoms using standardized self-report instruments and a Trier Social Stress Test (TSST) modified for continuous psychophysiological monitoring. Ambulatory monitoring of home sleep will also be obtained using actigraphy and sleep diaries. The investigators hypothesize that, post treatment, those individuals who napped will show greater questionnaire-based clinical improvement as well as lesser psychophysiological reactivity during the modified TSST compared to those who remained quietly awake. The investigators further hypothesize that characteristics of sleep quality and architecture during naps, specifically durations of total sleep, REM and slow-wave sleep, as well as REM continuity, will predict greater clinical improvement and lesser psychophysiological reactivity to the TSST in those who napped following their third and fourth therapy sessions. Positive results will provide the first proof-of-principle for sleep augmentation of exposure therapy for clinically significant extreme social anxiety.

Full description

Widely replicated studies demonstrate that sleep can enhance memory consolidation. Potential clinical applications of such findings have only begun to be explored. The investigators have recently shown that nocturnal sleep following simulated exposure therapy for high levels of spider fear reduced both psychophysiological and self-reported reactivity when participants were re-exposed to the same and to novel spider stimuli. The proposed research will extend these findings to the more debilitating and clinically important condition of extreme social anxiety. The investigators will examine whether post-exposure naps can be used to strengthen therapeutic extinction memories formed during exposure exercises used in the behavioral treatment of extreme social anxiety. A total of 32 individuals with high levels of social anxiety, evidenced by scores of 60 or greater on the Liebowitz Social Anxiety Scale, self-report during a clinical interview and demonstrated enhanced psychophysiological reactivity when imagining a socially stressful scenario, will be enrolled in an exposure-based group treatment for extreme social anxiety. Eight successive therapy groups of 4 patients each will be offered during the 2-year funding period. The third and fourth sessions of this validated 5-week/5-session treatment will involve each participant delivering a speech on a topic individually chosen to elicit significant social anxiety. Following both of these sessions, all 4 participants will go to the nearby Massachusetts General Hospital sleep laboratory where 2 will be given a 2-hour sleep opportunity with polysomnographic (PSG) monitoring and the other 2 will be similarly instrumented but undergo 2 hours of monitored quiet wakefulness (prior to session 3 participants will be randomized to the sleep or wakefulness arm). Before beginning treatment and within several days following the final treatment session, all participants will be individually assessed for social anxiety symptoms using standardized self-report instruments. At these same times, they will undergo a Trier Social Stress Test (TSST) modified for continuous psychophysiological monitoring that also includes repeated Subjective Units of Distress (SUDS) self report and sampling for salivary cortisol. In addition to laboratory PSG, ambulatory monitoring of home sleep with actigraphy and sleep diaries will take place at pre-treatment baseline and during the last 3 weeks of treatment. The investigators hypothesize that those individuals allowed a 2-hour sleep opportunity following exposure sessions, compared to those who remained quietly awake, will show greater questionnaire-based clinical improvement as well as lesser psychophysiological and SUDS reactivity during the modified TSST. The investigators further hypothesize that characteristics of sleep quality and architecture during naps, specifically durations of total sleep, REM sleep and slow-wave sleep as well as REM continuity, will predict clinical improvement and diminished TSST reactivity in those who napped. To help ensure that observed sleep effects are attributable to the two 2-hour sleep opportunities, the investigators will control for actigraph and diary-measured sleep quality during treatment. Positive results will provide the first proof-of-principle for sleep augmentation of exposure therapy for a clinically significant extreme social anxiety.

Enrollment

35 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 40 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

  1. Treatment-seeking individuals diagnosed with Social Anxiety Disorder using the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV56 (DSM-5 SCID once available)

  2. A score > 60 on the Liebowitz Social Anxiety Scale (LSAS)13

  3. 18-40 years of age

  4. Proficient in English

  5. Normal or corrected to normal vision

  6. Able to give informed consent

  7. Willingness and ability to comply with the requirements of the study protocol

  8. Meets psychophysiological screening criteria for inclusion carried out as follows:

    • During a 5-min. baseline period, the candidate participant will sit quietly with skin conductance and orbicularis oculi EMG levels being recorded.
    • Toward the end of this period a loud acoustic stimulus will be presented several times and blink startle EMG and SCR will be recorded.
    • The candidate subject will then be asked to describe, for 2 min., their most fearful and upsetting past social experience.
    • They will then be instructed to silently reimagine this experience as vividly as possible.
    • During this imagination period, the loud acoustic stimulus will again be presented several times and blink startle EMG and SCR will be recorded.
    • Participants for whom mean SCR and blink startle EMG during the imagining period measurably exceed the means of these measures during baseline will be retained in the study whereas those for whom these measures do not change or are reduced will be excluded.
    • This procedure will help ensure that those included in the study will show potentiation of physiological reactivity while anticipating exposure to public speaking.

Exclusion criteria

  1. Any potentially confounding medical illness
  2. Lifetime history of any neurological illness or injury including neurodegenerative disorders or dementia, stroke, seizure disorders, neurosurgical procedures, head injury resulting in loss of consciousness for greater than 5 min.
  3. Lifetime history, diagnosed by DSM-IV criteria (or DSM-5 once its SCID available), of bipolar disorder, schizophrenia or other psychotic disorder, pervasive developmental disorder, chronic mental disorder due to a medical condition or other potentially confounding chronic mental disorder.
  4. Current major depressive, dysthymic or anxiety disorder other than Social Anxiety Disorder or other potentially confounding current mental disorder diagnosed by DSM-IV criteria (or DSM-5 once its SCID available).
  5. DSM-IV substance abuse or dependence within the last year, lifetime history of hospitalization for substance abuse (determined at clinical interview) or positive urine toxicology screen at the time of the clinical interview
  6. Any evidence of suicidal ideation, violent behavior or psychosis at the clinical interview
  7. Use of psychiatric medication within 4 weeks of study (with the exception of 6 weeks for fluoxetine)
  8. Current psychotherapy for Social Anxiety Disorder
  9. Any indication of a sleep disorder, particularly sleep-disordered breathing, on the Pittsburgh Structured Clinical Interview for Sleep Disorders
  10. Sleep onset latency > 1 hr, total sleep time < 5 hr or typical bed time later than 3 AM
  11. Overnight shift work or recent travel across multiple time zones
  12. > 4 caffeinated beverages per day or > 11 alcoholic beverages per week
  13. Nicotine use

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

35 participants in 2 patient groups

Post-Exposure Nap
Experimental group
Description:
Sleep-enhancement of extinction memory: At the end of the third and fourth of 5 exposure therapy sessions, all participants deliver a speech designed to elicit significant social anxiety. Following this speech, this arm will be given a 2-hour sleep opportunity with polysomnographic (PSG) monitoring.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Sleep-enhancement of extinction memory
Post-Exposure Wake
Active Comparator group
Description:
At the end of the third and fourth of 5 exposure therapy sessions, all participants deliver a speech designed to elicit significant social anxiety. Following this speech, this arm will be instrumented for PSG but, instead of napping, will undergo 2 hours of quiet wakefulness. Therefore, this arm will not undergo sleep-enhancement of extinction memory.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Sleep-enhancement of extinction memory

Trial contacts and locations

2

Loading...

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical trials

Find clinical trialsTrials by location
© Copyright 2026 Veeva Systems