Perinatal depression (PND) is the most common complication in pregnancy and postpartum, which increases risk for adverse perinatal outcomes such as preterm birth, maternal suicidal thoughts, and impaired mother-infant bonding. Insomnia often precedes PND cases and may serve as an entry point for interventions preventing PND. The proposed project is a large-scale clinical trial to test the effectiveness of a mindfulness-based sleep program designed for pregnant women to improve sleep and alleviate cognitive arousal to reduce risk for PND across pregnancy and postpartum.
Perinatal depression (PND) affects nearly 20% of pregnant and postpartum women, with estimates soaring above 30% during the COVID-19 pandemic. Prospective data show insomnia often precedes PND incidence and relapse cases by more than doubling risk for major depression. This is highly relevant to a large segment of the pregnant population as \~20% of women meet diagnostic criteria for insomnia disorder by the end of pregnancy. Fortunately, insomnia is a modifiable risk factor for PND, and insomnia may serve as an entry point to prevent PND incidence and relapse. The investigators have identified cognitive arousal as a promising candidate factor for alleviating insomnia and preventing depression via insomnia therapy. Indeed, undertreatment of cognitive arousal in pregnancy is associated with insomnia non-remission and continued depression after therapy. Moreover, patient stakeholders identify 'calming a busy mind at night' as a critical target for improving sleep during pregnancy. In effort to enhance alleviation of cognitive arousal to optimize clinical outcomes, the investigators developed Perinatal Understanding of Mindful Awareness for Sleep (PUMAS). PUMAS places behavioral sleep strategies within a mindfulness intervention framework to develop an insomnia therapy specifically for pregnant women: RCT data show that PUMAS yields large effects on insomnia, depression, and cognitive arousal. This study is a hybrid effectiveness-implementation RCT of 500 women with DSM-5 insomnia disorder (without PND) who are randomized to PUMAS or treatment-as-usual. The investigators will evaluate the effectiveness of PUMAS for alleviating insomnia and preventing PND across pregnancy and the first postpartum year. The investigators will also evaluate whether PUMAS engages a key candidate mechanism (high cognitive arousal) that is operative for addressing these clinical outcomes in the effectiveness context.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
500
Mindfulness-based sleep program for pregnant women.
Usual practices from real-world care experiences.
Henry Ford Medical Center
Novi, Michigan, United States
RECRUITINGComparative effectiveness between PUMAS and standard care on changes in insomnia symptoms.
The Insomnia Severity Index is a commonly used self-report measure of insomnia symptoms that has been validated in peripartum. ISI scores range from 0 to 28 with higher scores indicating greater insomnia severity.
Time frame: The investigators will examine change in ISI from Pretreatment Baseline to Posttreatment (8 weeks after baseline), and monthly for 1 year after childbirth..
Comparative effectiveness of PUMAS and standard care on prevention of perinatal depression.
The Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EDPS) is the most widely use depression measure in pregnancy and postpartum. EPDS scores range from 0 to 30 with higher scores indicating greater depression severity.
Time frame: The investigators will examine onset of perinatal depression (EPDS scores 13 or higher) at posttreatment (8 weeks after baseline) and assessed monthly for 1 year after childbirth.
Comparative effectiveness between PUMAS and standard care on nocturnal cognitive arousal symptoms.
The Pre-Sleep Arousal Scale's Cognitive factor (PSASC) is a self-report measure of nocturnal cognitive arousal that has been validated in peripartum. PSASC scores range 8 to 40 with higher scores indicating greater nocturnal cognitive arousal.
Time frame: The investigators will examine changes in PSASC from Pretreatment baseline to Posttreatment (8 weeks later).
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