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慢性偏头痛合并失眠的行为性失眠治疗随机对照试验性研究

Randomized Controlled Pilot Trial of Behavioral Insomnia Treatment for Chronic Migraine With Comorbid Insomnia.

作者信息

Smitherman Todd A, Walters A Brooke, Davis Rachel E, Ambrose Carrie E, Roland Malcolm, Houle Timothy T, Rains Jeanetta C

机构信息

Department of Psychology, Migraine and Behavioral Health Laboratory, University of Mississippi, Oxford, MS, USA.

Oxford Neurology Clinic, Oxford, MS, USA.

出版信息

Headache. 2016 Feb;56(2):276-91. doi: 10.1111/head.12760. Epub 2016 Jan 27.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Migraine frequently co-occurs with and is triggered by sleep disturbance, particularly insomnia, and the large majority of patients with chronic migraine (CM) have comorbid insomnia. Limited evidence suggests that behavioral regulation of sleep may reduce migraine frequency, but studies to date have not assessed the viability of stimulus control and sleep restriction interventions or included objective measurement of sleep parameters. The aim of this study, thus, was to pilot-test the efficacy of a brief behavioral insomnia intervention for adults with CM and comorbid insomnia; headache diaries and actigraphy were included to assess outcomes throughout the trial.

METHODS

This randomized parallel-arm pilot trial recruited adults with both CM and comorbid insomnia. Participants were randomly assigned to three 30-minute biweekly sessions of cognitive-behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBTi) or control treatment. Participants were blinded to treatment and control conditions to control for outcome expectations. Each treatment condition involved training in and daily practice in 5 instructions/skills. The CBTi group learned and practiced skills pertaining to stimulus control and sleep restriction. The control intervention was the same as used by Calhoun and Ford (2007) and involved training in and daily practice of skills pertaining to keeping a consistent food/liquid intake, range of motion exercises, and acupressure. Participants provided outcome data via daily headache diaries, actigraphy, and self-report measures. The primary outcome was reduction in headache frequency at 2 weeks post-treatment and 6-week follow-up; secondary outcomes included other headache parameters, objective actigraphic and subjective changes in sleep, and treatment effect sizes and perceived credibility. Generalized estimating equations with a binomial logit link and inverse probability weights were used to assess the primary outcome among the intent-to-treat sample, and repeated measures generalized linear models were used to assess changes in secondary outcomes after controlling for baseline values.

RESULTS

The intent-to-treat analyses included 31 adults (M age = 30.8 [12.9] years; 90.3% female; 80.6% white) with CM and comorbid insomnia. Both interventions yielded reductions in headache frequency at post-treatment (26.9% reduction for CBTi vs. 36.2% for control) and follow-up (48.9% for CBTi vs. 25.0% for control). At follow-up the odds of experiencing headache were 60% lower for CBTi than for control treatment, indicative of a large effect size that did not reach statistical significance after Bonferroni correction for assessing two primary endpoints (odds ratio: 0.40; 95% CI: 0.17, 0.91; P = .028). CBTi produced significantly larger increases than control treatment in total sleep time and sleep efficiency as quantified by actigraphy, as well as in self-reported insomnia severity. Adherence was high and treatments were perceived as credible without differences between groups, but the control group experienced a higher rate of dropouts. No adverse events were reported.

CONCLUSIONS

Behavioral treatment of comorbid insomnia in individuals with CM produced large reductions in headache frequency, though some improvement in headache occurred with a behavioral intervention not focused on modifying sleep. Among the CBTi group only, both headache frequency and sleep parameters continued to improve after treatment, suggesting the presence of enduring effects over time. Directly treating insomnia using components of stimulus control and sleep restriction holds promise for reducing comorbid migraine. Development of and comparison to a truly inert pseudotherapy control presents unique challenges that future studies should address.

摘要

背景

偏头痛常与睡眠障碍同时出现并由其引发,尤其是失眠,并且绝大多数慢性偏头痛(CM)患者合并有失眠症。有限的证据表明,睡眠的行为调节可能会降低偏头痛发作频率,但迄今为止的研究尚未评估刺激控制和睡眠限制干预措施的可行性,也未纳入对睡眠参数的客观测量。因此,本研究的目的是对一种针对患有CM和合并失眠症的成年人的简短行为性失眠干预措施的疗效进行初步测试;在整个试验过程中纳入头痛日记和活动记录仪以评估结果。

方法

这项随机平行臂初步试验招募了患有CM和合并失眠症的成年人。参与者被随机分配到三组,每组接受为期30分钟、每两周一次的失眠认知行为疗法(CBTi)或对照治疗。参与者对治疗和对照条件不知情,以控制结果预期。每种治疗条件都包括对5项指导/技能的培训和日常练习。CBTi组学习并练习与刺激控制和睡眠限制相关的技能。对照干预与卡尔霍恩和福特(2007年)所使用的相同,包括对与保持一致的食物/液体摄入量、关节活动范围练习和指压相关技能的培训和日常练习。参与者通过每日头痛日记、活动记录仪和自我报告测量提供结果数据。主要结果是治疗后2周和6周随访时头痛频率的降低;次要结果包括其他头痛参数、睡眠的客观活动记录和主观变化,以及治疗效果大小和感知可信度。使用具有二项式logit链接和逆概率权重的广义估计方程来评估意向性治疗样本中的主要结果,并使用重复测量广义线性模型来评估在控制基线值后次要结果的变化。

结果

意向性治疗分析纳入了31名患有CM和合并失眠症的成年人(年龄中位数 = 30.8 [12.9]岁;90.3%为女性;80.6%为白人)。两种干预措施均使治疗后(CBTi组降低26.9%,对照组降低36.2%)和随访时(CBTi组为48.9%,对照组为25.0%)的头痛频率有所降低。在随访时,CBTi组经历头痛的几率比对照治疗组低60%,表明效应大小较大,但在对两个主要终点进行Bonferroni校正后未达到统计学显著性(优势比:0.40;95%置信区间:0.17,0.91;P = 0.028)。通过活动记录仪量化,CBTi组在总睡眠时间和睡眠效率方面的增加显著大于对照治疗组,在自我报告的失眠严重程度方面也是如此。依从性很高,两组对治疗的可信度评价无差异,但对照组的退出率较高。未报告不良事件。

结论

对患有CM的个体的合并失眠症进行行为治疗可使头痛频率大幅降低,尽管一种未专注于改善睡眠的行为干预也使头痛有所改善。仅在CBTi组中,治疗后头痛频率和睡眠参数均持续改善,表明随着时间推移存在持久效果。使用刺激控制和睡眠限制的组成部分直接治疗失眠有望减少合并的偏头痛。开发并与真正惰性的伪治疗对照进行比较存在独特挑战,未来研究应予以解决。

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