The purpose of this research study is to compare the effectiveness of Zolpidem CR to that of placebo in improving sleep efficiency in people with dementia admitted to the hospital because of their symptoms. You can participate in this study if you have dementia of the Alzheimer's type or vascular dementia. This study involves placebo; a placebo is a tablet that looks exactly like Zolpidem CR, the study drug, but contains no active study drug. We will use placebos to see if the study results are due to the study drug or due to other reasons. Zolpidem CR is also called Ambien CR and is widely available by prescription. Zolpidem CR is approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for the short-term treatment of insomnia (trouble falling or staying asleep).
Sleep patterns normally change with age. Sleep/wake cycles appear to be compromised in people suffering from dementia. Most research involving sleep in dementia has involved community dwelling or nursing home residents. Relatively little is known about the sleep patterns of patients with dementia who develop acute behavioral and psychiatric symptoms and necessitate hospitalization. The relationship between sleep disturbances in these patients and behavioral/psychiatric symptoms is also insufficiently studied. The current study will examine these two sets of data (sleep/wake cycles and clinical symptoms) in a population of elderly subjects with Dementia of the Alzheimer's type (DAT) or vascular dementia (VD) during their hospitalization period. We will compare the sleep outcome measures (primarily sleep efficiency) and clinical outcome measures in subjects treated with Zolpidem CR or Placebo. We will utilize a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled design to test our hypothesis that targeting sleep disturbances in hospitalized elderly subjects with DAT or VD leads to improvement in sleep and clinical outcomes.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
20
After a 48-hour period of baseline actigraphy and clinical measurements, study subjects were randomized to take either Zolpidem CR 6.25mg by mouth (1 pink tablet) or Placebo by mouth (also 1 pink tablet) for up to 3 weeks or the end of the subjects' hospital stay.
After a 48-hour period of baseline actigraphy and clinical measurements, study subjects were randomized to take either Zolpidem CR 6.25mg by mouth (1 pink tablet) or Placebo by mouth (also 1 pink tablet) for up to 3 weeks or the end of the subjects' hospital stay.
Massachusetts General Hospital
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Sleep Efficiency
Sleep efficiency during the down interval. The down interval signifies the period of time (in minutes) at night when subjects are in bed and trying to sleep. Sleep efficiency is calculated as (100\*sleep minutes)/\[time interval from sleep onset (as defined by the sleep latency) to sleep offset (the end of the last sleep episode in the Down interval)\]. The time period was different for each patient, it was their duration of hospitalization. The first 48 hours patients were not on the study drug, so the reported least squares mean is an estimate of the mean for the subsequent time period where the patients received different therapies. These means are corrected for differences that might have existed during the first 48 hours. The results would be similar to the results attained from considering the mean during the first 48 hours as a baseline covariate in an Analysis of Covariance, but would be more robust to missing data.
Time frame: Post-intervention, up to 3 weeks
Sleep Minutes
Total sleep minutes during the down period. The down interval signifies the period of time (in minutes) at night when subjects are in bed and trying to sleep. The time period was different for each patient, it was their duration of hospitalization. The first 48 hours patients were not on the study drug, so the reported least squares mean is an estimate of the mean for the subsequent time period where the patients received different therapies. These means are corrected for differences that might have existed during the first 48 hours. The results would be similar to the results attained from considering the mean during the first 48 hours as a baseline covariate in an Analysis of Covariance, but would be more robust to missing data.
Time frame: post-intervention, up to 3 weeks
Measures of Aggression, Psychosis, General Clinical Status, Cognitive Measures, Mood Symptoms
Rating Scale for Aggressive Behavior in the Elderly (RAGE, 0-61); higher is worse. Disruptive Behavior Rating Scales (DBRS, 0-105); higher is worse. Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI, 0-144) - measures 12 different domains of neuropsychiatric symptoms such as delusions, hallucinations, anxiety, depression, apathy, etc.; higher is worse. Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS, 0-90); higher is worse. Mini-mental state examination (MMSE, 0-30); higher is better. The time period was different for each patient, it was their duration of hospitalization. The first 48 hours patients were not on the study drug, so the reported least squares mean is an estimate of the mean for the subsequent time period where the patients received different therapies. These means are corrected for differences that might have existed during the first 48 hours. The results would be similar to the results attained from considering the mean during the firs
Time frame: post-intervention, up to 3 weeks
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