0529 Behavioral Therapy Components for Insomnia and Fatigue in COPD

Sleep(2020)

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摘要
Abstract Introduction Insomnia contributes to fatigue, a common symptom in COPD. Our study aims were: (1) to determine the efficacy of a) cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I) and b) COPD education (COPD-ED) on insomnia and fatigue, and (2) to define potential mechanistic contributors to pre/post intervention change in insomnia and fatigue in patients with COPD and insomnia. Methods A randomized 2x2 factorial design was used with factors representing CBT-I (yes/no) and COPD-ED (yes/no). Attention control (health videos) were used in the absence of CBT-I or COPD-ED. All patients received 6, 75-minute weekly sessions. Dependent variables included insomnia severity (Sleep Impairment Index (SII), range 0-28) and fatigue (Chronic Respiratory Disease Questionnaire (CRQ) range 1-7) measured at baseline, just post-intervention, and at 3-months post-intervention. Results One hundred nine patients (FEV1% predicted 67 ± 24% (mean ± SD), age 65 ± 8 years, SII 15.9 ± 8, CRQ 3.7 ± 1.1) participated in the study. After 6 sessions, insomnia decreased more in patients who received CBT-I (-5.8) than those who did not (-2.2; p=0.0002). This effect was sustained at the 3-month follow-up (p=0.0003). Fatigue showed no significant differences for CBT-I at 6-weeks (p=.27) but at 3-months patients receiving CBT-I showed marginally better improvement (.75, a clinically important difference) compared to those who did not receive CBT-I (.43; p=.09). COPD-ED showed no effect on insomnia or fatigue. Two main effects suggest mechanisms for the pre-post efficacy of CBT-I: improved sleep beliefs (p=0.0257) and self-efficacy for sleep (p=0.0619) after 6 sessions which were sustained at 3 months (p=0.0184 and p=0.0431 respectively). Conclusion CBT-I produced sustained decreases in insomnia in patients with COPD. Results suggest that changes in beliefs about sleep and improved self-efficacy for managing sleep may mediate CBT-I associated decreases in insomnia. Support This research was supported by the National Institute of Nursing Research of the National Institutes of Health R01NR013937.
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