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The SleepWell Study - Chronotherapeutic Intervention to Improve Sleep Following ACS

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Columbia University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Acute Coronary Syndrome
Insomnia
Sleep Disturbance

Treatments

Behavioral: Sleep Hygiene Education
Behavioral: BLB Intervention
Behavioral: BLT Intervention

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT05299723
P30AG064198-02 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)
AAAU0150

Details and patient eligibility

About

This two-phase pilot study will test the feasibility of a "combined chronotherapy" (CC) intervention consisting of morning bright light therapy (BLT) and evening blue light blocking (BLB), administered daily for 4 weeks in patients who experienced acute coronary syndrome (ACS). Phase A of the study will be a single-arm open-label study of the home-based CC intervention in 5 post-ACS patients. Phase B of the study will be a parallel-arm randomized clinical trial (RCT) in which 15 post-ACS patients will be randomized (using a 2:1 allocation) to active CC treatment or sleep hygiene education control group. In Phase A and Phase B, the primary aims are study feasibility, acceptability, appropriateness, and usability. In Phase B, the investigator will additionally assess whether the intervention engages its proposed proximal target mechanism - sleep.

Full description

Survivors of acute medical events often experience psychological distress including post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The goal of this project is to conduct preliminary testing of a chronotherapeutic intervention targeting disturbed sleep in survivors of ACS.

There are many ways to try and improve sleep. Some of these include taking medications or working with a trained sleep specialist. The goal of this research study is to investigate the usefulness of a new way of trying to improve sleep (an "intervention") that does not involve taking medications or working with a specialist or therapist. Chronotherapeutic interventions are non-pharmacologic approaches that target the circadian or sleep-wake cycle to improve behavioral or health outcomes. Light is the strongest external signal for the human circadian system and manipulations of the light environment (e.g., morning bright light exposure and evening light avoidance) are effective in improving sleep and mood.

Participants in Phase A of this study will be asked to use a light visor to administer light to the eye each morning (BLT component of the CC) and orange-colored glasses to block out short wavelength ("blue") light to the eye each night before going to bed (BLB component of the CC) for 4 weeks. Participants are also asked to wear an activity/sleep monitor throughout the 4-week period and complete questionnaires about their sleep. Participants will also receive a sleep hygiene education by watching educational videos.

In Phase B of the study, participants will be randomized to either the active CC intervention condition (consisting of both the BLT and BLB components along with sleep hygiene education) or a sleep hygiene education only control condition. Participants will be randomized in a 2:1 ratio to CC condition or control condition. All participants (i.e., those in the CC and control groups) will wear an activity/sleep monitor throughout the 4-week period and complete questionnaires about their sleep. There will also be a 3 month follow up after the end of the 4-week intervention period for both groups where we assess sleep outcomes.

Enrollment

19 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Patients will be eligible for PHASE A if they meet the following criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

  1. 18 years of age or older,
  2. can write, speak and read English,
  3. provider and patient confirmed ACS,
  4. ACS event occurred within the past 3 months, and
  5. presence of insomnia symptoms based on the Insomnia Symptoms Questionnaire, or frequently (3-4 times per week) or always (5-7 times per week) experiencing short sleep duration of 6 hours or less per night.

Exclusion Criteria:

  1. severe disabling chronic medical and/or psychiatric comorbidities determined on a case-by-case basis that prevent safe or adequate participation;
  2. deemed unable to comply with the protocol (either self-selected or indicated during screening that s/he/they could not complete all requested tasks). This includes, but is not limited to, patients with a level of cognitive impairment indicative of dementia, patients with current alcohol or substance abuse, and patients with severe mental illness (e.g., schizophrenia);
  3. unavailable for follow-up for reasons such as terminal illness and imminent plans to leave the United States (as we have migrant or mobile patients due to their citizenship and work issues);
  4. Non-English speaking;
  5. Lack of reliable phone or e-mail access;
  6. History of bipolar disorder (manic episode can be triggered by BLT) or positive screen for bipolar disorder based on the Mood Disorder Questionnaire;
  7. Eye disease including glaucoma or retinopathy (BLT contraindications);
  8. Blindness;
  9. Night shift work schedules;
  10. taking any anti-depressant or anti-anxiety medications; and
  11. taking other medications that increase sensitivity to light (by self-report).

Patients will be eligible for PHASE B if they meet the following criteria:

Inclusion Criteria:

  1. 18 years of age or older,
  2. can write, speak and read English or Spanish,
  3. provider and patient confirmed ACS,
  4. ACS event occurred within the past 3 months, and
  5. presence of insomnia symptoms based on the Insomnia Symptoms Questionnaire, or frequently (3-4 times per week) or always (5-7 times per week) experiencing short sleep duration of 6 hours or less per night.

Exclusion Criteria:

  1. severe disabling chronic medical and/or psychiatric comorbidities determined on a case-by-case basis that prevent safe or adequate participation;
  2. deemed unable to comply with the protocol (either self-selected or indicated during screening that s/he/they could not complete all requested tasks). This includes, but is not limited to, patients with a level of cognitive impairment indicative of dementia, patients with current alcohol or substance abuse, and patients with severe mental illness (e.g., schizophrenia);
  3. unavailable for follow-up for reasons such as terminal illness and imminent plans to leave the United States (as we have migrant or mobile patients due to their citizenship and work issues);
  4. Non-English and non-Spanish speaking;
  5. Lack of reliable phone or e-mail access;
  6. History of bipolar disorder (manic episode can be triggered by BLT) or positive screen for bipolar disorder based on the Mood Disorder Questionnaire;
  7. Eye disease including glaucoma or retinopathy (BLT contraindications);
  8. Blindness;
  9. Night shift work schedules;
  10. taking any anti-depressant or anti-anxiety medications; and
  11. taking other medications that increase sensitivity to light (by self-report).

Trial design

Primary purpose

Supportive Care

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

19 participants in 3 patient groups

Phase A - open label single-arm
Experimental group
Description:
All Phase A participants randomized to the home-based CC intervention will be use a light visor to administer "bright light therapy" in the morning for 30 minutes after waking up (BLT), and use orange-colored glasses for "blue light blocking" at night from 8:00 pm until going to sleep (BLB).
Treatment:
Behavioral: BLT Intervention
Behavioral: Sleep Hygiene Education
Behavioral: BLB Intervention
Phase B - active CC treatment
Experimental group
Description:
For all Phase B participants randomized to the active CC group, BLT will occur each morning after awakening and will last for 30 minutes and BLB at night from 8:00 pm until going to sleep throughout the 4-week intervention period. Participants in the CC group will also receive a sleep hygiene education.
Treatment:
Behavioral: BLT Intervention
Behavioral: Sleep Hygiene Education
Behavioral: BLB Intervention
Phase B - sleep hygiene education control group
Active Comparator group
Description:
All Phase B participants randomized to the control group will receive a sleep hygiene education alone at the start of the 4 week monitoring period.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Sleep Hygiene Education

Trial documents
2

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Ari Shechter, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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