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Examining the Efficacy of Mattress Technology in Improving the Sleep Quality of Children With ASD

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NeuroTherapia, Inc.

Status

Completed

Conditions

Autism Spectrum Disorders

Treatments

Device: Sound to Sleep System

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of the present study is to evaluate the tolerability and efficacy of the Sound To Sleep System™ in improving the sleep quality of children with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD). The Sound To Sleep System™ is a mattress foundation designed to improve sleep quality in individuals with ASD and sleep disturbance by providing mattress vibrations that accompany and sync with auditory stimulation. For the present study, the primary objectives are as follows:

* Study Aim 1 - To determine whether the use of the Sound To Sleep System™ in ASD-affected children with sleep disturbances is well tolerated as defined by group drop-out proportion due to issues with the mattress technology.

The study will also explore the following objectives:

  • Study Aim 2 - To determine the efficacy of the Sound To Sleep System™ in improving sleep quality as measured by parent reported sleep quality in ASD-affected children with sleep disturbances. (Please note Study Aim 2 was changed from clinician-rated to parent-rated because we were not able to collect clinician-rated sleep quality information).
  • Study Aim 3 - To determine the tolerability of the Sound To Sleep System™ as defined by study drop-out due to any reason and caregiver ratings of ease of mattress technology use.
  • Study Aim 4 - To determine whether use of the mattress technology improves functioning as defined by secondary outcome measures.

Full description

The present study aims to evaluate the tolerability and efficacy of a new mattress technology in improving the sleep quality of children with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD). Clinical and population studies indicate that children with ASD exhibit elevated rates of sleep disturbance compared to their typically-developing peers and that 50% to 80% of children with ASD have sleep problems. Sleep disturbance can include bedtime resistance, sleep onset latency, nighttime awakenings, decreased total sleep time, early morning awakenings, and other measures of sleep quality. Sleep problems in children with ASD are associated with greater externalizing and internalizing behavior problems during the waking day, poorer adaptive functioning, and can cause significant parental stress. Previous studies have examined the effectiveness of behavioral treatments, environmental modifications, melatonin, and psychopharmacologic treatments in decreasing the rates of sleep disturbance. However, none of these approaches have identified treatments that are effective for all ASD-affected children with sleep difficulties. Given the high prevalence of sleep disturbance in this population, there is a great need to identify additional treatments that may improve sleep in children with ASD.

The purpose of the present study is to evaluate the tolerability and efficacy of the Sound To Sleep System™ using a single blind (actigraphy scoring blinded), cross-over design. The Sound To Sleep System™ is a mattress foundation designed to improve sleep quality in individuals with ASD and sleep disturbance by providing mattress vibrations that accompany and sync with auditory stimulation. For the present study, the primary objectives are as follows:

Study Aim 1- To determine whether the use of the Sound To Sleep System™ in ASD-affected children with sleep disturbances is well tolerated as defined by group drop-out proportion due to issues with the mattress technology.

The study will also explore the following objectives:

Study Aim 2- To determine the efficacy of the Sound To Sleep System™ in improving parent-reported sleep quality in ASD-affected children with sleep disturbances.

Study Aim 3- To determine the tolerability of the Sound To Sleep System™ as defined by study drop-out due to any reason and caregiver ratings of ease of mattress technology use.

Study Aim 4- To determine whether use of the mattress technology improves functioning as defined by secondary outcome measures.

Enrollment

45 patients

Sex

All

Ages

30 months to 13 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • ASD Diagnosis
  • 2.5-12.99 Years of Age
  • Sleep Difficulty as indicated by significant sleep disturbance on the Child Sleep Habits Questionnaire
  • If participant is using medication or attends therapy, it must be stable four (4) weeks prior to their study participation and throughout the 5-6 week study period.

Exclusion criteria

  • Age less than 2.5 years or more than 12.99 years
  • Individuals who may have medication or therapy changes 4 weeks prior to study start date or during the study period
  • An participant diagnosed with epilepsy, Fragile X, Downs Syndrome, seizure disorder, Neurofibromatosis, or Tuberous Sclerosis
  • Any child with a pacemaker or other electrical device

Trial design

Primary purpose

Supportive Care

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Crossover Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

45 participants in 2 patient groups

Mattress Technology On then Off
Experimental group
Description:
Intervention: Sound to Sleep System will be turned on for the first two weeks of the study allowing the participant sleeping atop the mattress to feel the vibrations synced to the audio input. Sound to sleep system will be turned on during this phase of the study. The sound to sleep system will sync an audio input with the vibrations of the mattress technology and allow the user to control the intensity of the vibration. No intervention: The mattress technology will be turned off for the second two weeks of the study. During this time, there will be no intervention.
Treatment:
Device: Sound to Sleep System
Mattress Technology Turned Off then On
Experimental group
Description:
No intervention: For the first two weeks of the study, the mattress technology will not be turned off. There will be no intervention during this time. Intervention: Sound to Sleep System will be turned on for the second two weeks of the study allowing the participant sleeping atop the mattress to feel the vibrations synced to the audio input. Sound to sleep system will be turned on during this phase of the study. The sound to sleep system will sync an audio input with the vibrations of the mattress technology and allow the user to control the intensity of the vibration.
Treatment:
Device: Sound to Sleep System

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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