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Women with early stage breast cancer may experience difficulty falling asleep or staying asleep. If this occurs for more than 4 weeks, these participants may have chronic insomnia. Chronic insomnia can lead to difficulty coping with stress, changes in mood, increased use of medications for sleep and an overall decrease in quality of life.
The investigators have developed an internet-based website that is designed to help people manage symptoms typically experienced by breast cancer survivors, including insomnia, fatigue, pain and overall poor quality of life. The investigators want to learn whether this type of treatment can reduce chronic insomnia and improve the way subjects feel using both questionnaires and a special form of a wrist watch. This information may help the investigators better manage sleep difficulties in subjects who experience these symptoms after diagnosis of their breast cancer.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Clinical diagnosis of insomnia as identified through the screening Insomnia Severity Index score >14
Insomnia present for > 30 days per patient report
Female gender
Histologically proven stage 0-III invasive carcinoma of the breast
a. Patient's must have completed primary surgical resection at least 2 weeks prior to enrollment, radiation at least 2 weeks prior to enrollment and/or cytotoxic chemotherapy at least 6 weeks prior to enrollment in the study
ECOG performance status 0-2
Ability to operate the accelerometer (Actiwatch Spectrum Pro)
The patient is aware of the nature of her diagnosis, understands the study regimen, its requirements, risks, and discomforts, and is able and willing to sign an informed consent document
Exclusion criteria
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4 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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