This randomized, phase I/II, open-label study will investigate the efficacy and safety of an educational sleep intervention vs standard of care in adults undergoing alloHSCT. The randomization target in this pilot phase is 60 patients.
To facilitate rapid randomization and baseline collection of patient samples in the patient's home environment, screening activities and assessment of inclusion and exclusion criteria will begin once the patient is identified as transplant eligible at the bone marrow transplant meeting. The patient will subsequently be contacted by a study investigator to explain the study, including its potential benefits and risks. Patients meeting all inclusion and exclusion criteria will be randomized 1:1 to receive either educational intervention or standard of care therapy.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
60
The program's educational content is designed to engage patients in the science of sleep and recovery. Segments like "The Sleep Adventure" demystify complex neurobiological processes in an accessible format, aligning with emerging trends in patient education that focus on engagement and knowledge empowerment. Concurrently, the program's physical activity component is meticulously crafted, offering safe, supportive exercises that correspond with the treatment stages of alloHSCT patients. This aspect draws upon evidence highlighting the importance of sustained physical activity during intensive treatments to enhance overall recovery and quality of life. Additionally, the program comprehensively addresses sleep disturbances, prevalent in HSCT patients, through in-depth exploration and evidence-based, non-pharmacologic management strategies, reflecting the significant impact of sleep quality on patient recovery and long-term health outcomes.
Scripps Health
San Diego, California, United States
RECRUITINGObjective Sleep Measurement
A wearable device will continuously measure objective sleep quality. The outcome will be reported as the average sleep duration (in minutes per day) over the study period. Data will be aggregated for the entire duration of the study.
Time frame: Continuous measurement throughout the study duration (from 2 weeks prior to alloHSCT to 100 days post-alloHSCT)
Objective activity measurement
A wearable device will continuously measure physical activity. The outcome will be reported as the average activity duration (in minutes per day) over the study period.
Time frame: Continuous measurement throughout the study duration (from 2 weeks prior to alloHSCT to 100 days post-alloHSCT).
Subjective sleep quality
Sleep quality will be assessed using the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI), with measurements taken at 12 days prior to hospitalization for alloHSCT, 10 days after alloHSCT, and 60 days after alloHSCT. The PSQI is a validated questionnaire that includes a combination of Likert-type and open-ended questions, which are converted to scaled scores following the PSQI guidelines. Respondents indicate the frequency of specific sleep difficulties over the past month and rate their overall sleep quality. Scores for each component range from 0 to 3. Scores are summed to yield a total score ranging from 0 to 21 with the higher total score (referred to as global score) indicating worse sleep quality.
Time frame: Measurements will occur 12 days prior to alloHSCT, 10 days after alloHSCT and 60 days after alloHSCT
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