This is a four-arm, randomized, controlled, clinical trial examining the efficacy of of cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT)-I and armodafinil in reducing insomnia in 226 female breast cancer patients who report sleep disturbances following completion of chemotherapy.
Treatment Protocol: CBT-I and armodafinil are being studied in a four-arm, randomized, controlled, clinical trial of 226 cancer survivors with chronic insomnia who are at least one month post treatment. The seven-week intervention is designed to determine the efficacy and acceptability of these treatment strategies in reducing insomnia in cancer survivors. Assessments will be made by questionnaires before, during, and two weeks following the study intervention. All ancillary treatments, as appropriate for control of symptoms caused by the cancer or its treatment may be administered as clinically indicated. Withdrawal of Sleep Medications: All participants, prior to beginning the baseline data collection phase of the study, must have withdrawn from all sleep medications, including: prescription, over-the-counter, CAM and herbal remedies for at least one week prior to beginning the study. CBT-I (Arms 3 \& 4): CBT-I will be provided on an individual basis to all patients in study Arms 3 \& 4 by a licensed clinical psychologist trained in CBT-I by Dr. Perlis. Subjects in these two study arms will receive 7 weeks of CBT-I, using a structured research grade protocol developed at the UR-SNRL. This manualized intervention, which exists as a published text: Perlis et al., 2005, includes four essential components: Sleep Restriction Therapy, Stimulus Control Instruction, Sleep Hygiene Guidelines, and a session of cognitive therapy. Data Collection: Patients will complete the Insomnia Severity (ISI) at the time of consent and every Friday during weeks 3-11 of the study. A follow-up call by study personnel will be made to each participant not currently receiving CBT-I on each of these Fridays to promote compliance, prompt completion, assess potential side effects of study medication, and answer patient questions.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
138
Armodafinil P.O. daily/47 days (3-days at 50mg, then 40 days at 100mg, then 4 days at 50mg)
Placebo for 47 days
Seven weekly sessions of cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I)
University of Rochester James P. Wilmot Cancer Center
Rochester, New York, United States
Behavioral Sleep Medicine Program, Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Change in Insomnia Severity Index From Baseline to Post-intervention
The Insomnia Severity Index (ISI) is a commonly used, 7-item psychometrically validated measure used to rate insomnia with 0-7 = absence of insomnia, 8-14 = subthreshold insomnia symptoms, 15-21 = moderate insomnia, and 22-28 = severe insomnia.
Time frame: ANCOVA was employed with multiple imputation on the post-intervention score (average of the two post-intervention weeks), controlling for the score at the time of consent (pre).
Fatigue Will be Assessed by the Total Score of the Revised Brief Fatigue Inventory (BFI) .
The revised Brief Fatigue Inventory (BFI) is a 9-item, patient-report instrument with established reliability and validity. The BFI allows for the rapid assessment of fatigue level in cancer patients and identifies those patients with severe fatigue. Three items ask patients to rate their fatigue "now," and fatigue at its "worst" and "usual" for the last 24 hours. The 11-point scales are bounded by 0 = "no fatigue" and 10 = "fatigue as bad as you can imagine." Using the same type of scales, the remaining questions ask patients to rate how their fatigue interferes with several functional domains, including general activity, walking, mood, work, and relations with others. These scales are bounded by 0 = "does not interfere" and 10 = "interferes completely." A global fatigue score (ranging from 0-10) can be obtained by averaging all the items on the BFI.
Time frame: ANCOVA was employed with multiple imputation on the post-intervention score (average of the two post-intervention weeks), controlling for the score at the time of consent (pre).
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