Actively Recruiting
Sleep Well Despite Persistent Pain Symptoms
Led by University of Tromso · Updated on 2025-02-24
106
Participants Needed
1
Research Sites
152 weeks
Total Duration
On this page
Sponsors
U
University of Tromso
Lead Sponsor
U
University Hospital of North Norway
Collaborating Sponsor
AI-Summary
What this Trial Is About
Background: The prevalence of comorbid insomnia is 8-10 times higher in patients with chronic pain than in the general population. Insomnia adds a considerable burden as it worsens the quality of life, restoration and repair, mental health and pain symptoms. Since pain and sleep problems are mutually reinforcing, improvements in sleep may have beneficial effects on pain. Unfortunately, the customary use of sleep medication (TAU: treatment-as-usual) often yields short-lived plus side effects. The "Sleep-Well" intervention examines if a group-based intervention program focusing on sleep literacy, sleep restriction, stimulus control and metacognitive therapy modules may perform better than TAU in improving patients' insomnia and sleep quality. Eligible patients: Investigators target adult patients referred to the University Hospital of North Norway (Tromsø) for a diagnostic evaluation of their pain condition. Patients eligible for the Sleep-Well study are those who satisfy diagnostic criteria for a non-malign pain disorder plus a comorbid insomnia sleep disorder. Patients are not eligible if they use drugs or large doses of morphine (\>100 equivalents), are engaged in an insurance case due to their diagnosis, or participate in other ongoing group programs at the hospital. Aims: This trial uses a randomized semi-crossover design to examine if the Sleep-Well group does better regarding insomnia and sleep quality than the control patients (TAU). The primary outcome measures are reductions in diagnostic criteria for insomnia, self-reported insomnia symptoms, quality of life, and actigraphy-measured insomnia indicators (long sleep onset latency, frequent nightly awakenings and early morning awakening). The secondary outcome measures include a simplified polysomnography measurement of brain activity during sleep to assess if proportions or durations of slow-wave versus light-wave sleep and EEG-based arousal indices improve. In addition, it is examined if the Sleep-Well intervention incurs benefits concerning pain complaints, dysfunctional sleep and pain cognitions, anxiety and depression. The intervention: The Sleep-Well program schedules group sessions that cover four topics (sleep literacy, behavioural and mental strategies, maintenance and relapse prevention). All sessions are led by two therapists. Those randomized to the active control group (TAU) cross over to the Sleep-Well intervention three months later.
CONDITIONS
Official Title
Sleep Well Despite Persistent Pain Symptoms
Who Can Participate
Eligibility Criteria
You may qualify if you...
- Patients diagnosed with chronic non-malignant pain according to ICD-10 at University Hospital of Northern Norway
- Meet criteria for comorbid insomnia
- Both first-time and previously referred patients
You will not qualify if you...
- Diagnosis of drug abuse according to ICD-10
- Ongoing compensation or insurance case related to health
- Use of drug treatment exceeding 100 morphine equivalents
- Participation in other group-based treatments at the hospital (must be completed before enrollment)
AI-Screening
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Trial Site Locations
Total: 1 location
1
UiT The Arctic University of Norway
Tromsø, Troms County, Norway, 9037
Actively Recruiting
Research Team
O
Oddgeir Friborg, PhD
CONTACT
S
Svein Bergvik, PhD
CONTACT
How is the study designed?
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Masking
SINGLE
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Model
CROSSOVER
Primary Purpose
TREATMENT
Number of Arms
2
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