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非药物干预措施改善痴呆患者的睡眠障碍。

Non-pharmacological interventions for sleep disturbances in people with dementia.

机构信息

Nursing Research Group, Institute of Social Medicine and Epidemiology, University of Lübeck, Lübeck, Germany.

Institute for Health Services Research and Health Economics, Centre for Health and Society, Medical Faculty and University Hospital Düsseldorf, Heinrich-Heine University, Düsseldorf, Germany.

出版信息

Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2023 Jan 3;1(1):CD011881. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD011881.pub2.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Sleep disturbances occur frequently in people with dementia with a reported prevalence of up to 40%. Common problems are increased number and duration of awakenings and increased percentage of light sleep. Sleep disturbances are associated with a number of problems for people with dementia, their relatives, and carers. In people with dementia, they may lead to worsening of cognitive symptoms, challenging behaviours such as restlessness or wandering, and further harms, such as accidental falls. Sleep disturbances are also associated with significant carer distress and have been reported as a factor contributing to institutionalisation of people with dementia. As pharmacological approaches have shown unsatisfactory results, there is a need to synthesise the research evidence on non-pharmacological strategies to improve sleep in people with dementia. As interventions are often complex, consisting of more than one active component, and implemented in complex contexts, it may not be easy to identify effective intervention components.

OBJECTIVES

To evaluate the benefits and harms of non-pharmacological interventions on sleep disturbances in people with dementia compared to usual care, no treatment, any other non-pharmacological intervention, or any drug treatment intended to improve sleep, and to describe the components and processes of any complex intervention included.

SEARCH METHODS

We used standard, extensive Cochrane search methods. The latest search was 13 January 2022.

SELECTION CRITERIA

We included individually or cluster-randomised controlled trials in people with dementia comparing non-pharmacological interventions to improve sleep compared to usual care or to other interventions of any type. Eligible studies had to have a sleep-related primary outcome. We included people with a diagnosis of dementia and sleep problems at baseline irrespective of age, type of dementia, severity of cognitive impairment, or setting. Studies reporting results on a mixed sample (e.g. in a nursing home) were only considered for inclusion if at least 80% of participants had dementia.

DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS

We used standard Cochrane methods. Our primary outcomes were 1. objective sleep-related outcomes (e.g. total nocturnal sleep time, consolidated sleep time at night, sleep efficiency, total wake time at night (or time spent awake after sleep onset), number of nocturnal awakenings, sleep onset latency, daytime/night-time sleep ratio, night-time/total sleep ratio over 24 hours) and 2.

ADVERSE EVENTS

Our secondary outcomes were 3. subjective sleep-related outcomes, 4. behavioural and psychological symptoms of dementia, 5. quality of life, 6. functional status, 7. institutionalisation, 8. compliance with the intervention, and 9. attrition rates. We used GRADE to assess the certainty of evidence and chose key outcomes to be included in summary of findings tables.

MAIN RESULTS

We included 19 randomised controlled trials with 1335 participants allocated to treatment or control groups. Fourteen studies were conducted in nursing homes, three included community residents, one included 'inpatients', one included people from a mental health centre, and one included people from district community centres for older people. Fourteen studies were conducted in the US. We also identified nine ongoing studies. All studies applied one or more non-pharmacological intervention aiming to improve physiological sleep in people with dementia and sleep problems. The most frequently examined single intervention was some form of light therapy (six studies), five studies included physical or social activities, three carer interventions, one daytime sleep restriction, one slow-stroke back massage, and one transcranial electrostimulation. Seven studies examined multimodal complex interventions. Risk of bias of included studies was frequently unclear due to incomplete reporting. Therefore, we rated no study at low risk of bias. We are uncertain whether light therapy has any effect on sleep-related outcomes (very low-certainty evidence). Physical activities may slightly increase the total nocturnal sleep time and sleep efficiency, and may reduce the total time awake at night and slightly reduce the number of awakenings at night (low-certainty evidence). Social activities may slightly increase total nocturnal sleep time and sleep efficiency (low-certainty evidence). Carer interventions may modestly increase total nocturnal sleep time, may slightly increase sleep efficiency, and may modestly decrease the total awake time during the night (low-certainty evidence from one study). Multimodal interventions may modestly increase total nocturnal sleep time and may modestly reduce the total wake time at night, but may result in little to no difference in number of awakenings (low-certainty evidence). We are uncertain about the effects of multimodal interventions on sleep efficiency (very low-certainty evidence). We found low-certainty evidence that daytime sleep restrictions, slow-stroke back massage, and transcranial electrostimulation may result in little to no difference in sleep-related outcomes. Only two studies reported information about adverse events, detecting only few such events in the intervention groups.

AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Despite the inclusion of 19 randomised controlled trials, there is a lack of conclusive evidence concerning non-pharmacological interventions for sleep problems in people with dementia. Although neither single nor multimodal interventions consistently improved sleep with sufficient certainty, we found some positive effects on physical and social activities as well as carer interventions. Future studies should use rigorous methods to develop and evaluate the effectiveness of multimodal interventions using current guidelines on the development and evaluation of complex interventions. At present, no single or multimodal intervention can be clearly identified as suitable for widespread implementation.

摘要

背景

痴呆症患者常出现睡眠障碍,其报告的患病率高达 40%。常见问题是觉醒次数和时间增多、浅睡眠比例增加。睡眠障碍与痴呆症患者及其亲属和照顾者的许多问题有关。在痴呆症患者中,它们可能导致认知症状恶化、出现不安或游荡等挑战性行为,以及进一步的伤害,如意外跌倒。睡眠障碍也与严重的照顾者困扰有关,并被报道是导致痴呆症患者入院的因素之一。由于药物治疗方法的效果并不令人满意,因此需要综合研究证据,以确定改善痴呆症患者睡眠的非药物干预措施。由于干预措施通常很复杂,由一个以上的活跃成分组成,并在复杂的环境中实施,因此可能不容易确定有效的干预成分。

目的

评估与常规护理、无治疗、任何其他非药物干预或任何旨在改善睡眠的药物治疗相比,非药物干预对痴呆症患者睡眠障碍的疗效和安全性,并描述任何复杂干预措施的组成部分和过程。

检索方法

我们使用了标准的、广泛的 Cochrane 检索方法。最新的检索日期是 2022 年 1 月 13 日。

选择标准

我们纳入了比较非药物干预措施与常规护理或其他任何类型的干预措施对改善睡眠的效果的、针对痴呆症患者的个体或群组随机对照试验。合格的研究必须有与睡眠相关的主要结局。我们纳入了在基线时有睡眠问题的痴呆症患者,无论年龄、痴呆症类型、认知障碍严重程度或环境如何。如果至少 80%的参与者患有痴呆症,则报告混合样本(例如在疗养院)结果的研究仅被考虑纳入。

数据收集和分析

我们使用了标准的 Cochrane 方法。我们的主要结局是:1. 客观的睡眠相关结局(例如总夜间睡眠时间、夜间睡眠的巩固时间、睡眠效率、夜间总觉醒时间(或睡眠起始后觉醒的时间)、夜间觉醒次数、睡眠起始潜伏期、日间/夜间睡眠时间比、夜间/总睡眠时间比 24 小时内)和 2. 不良事件。我们的次要结局是:3. 主观的睡眠相关结局、4. 痴呆症的行为和心理症状、5. 生活质量、6. 功能状态、7. 机构化、8. 对干预措施的依从性和 9. 失访率。我们使用 GRADE 评估证据的确定性,并选择关键结局纳入总结表。

主要结果

我们纳入了 19 项随机对照试验,共 1335 名参与者被分配到治疗组或对照组。14 项研究在疗养院进行,3 项研究纳入了社区居民,1 项研究纳入了“住院患者”,1 项研究纳入了来自精神卫生中心的患者,1 项研究纳入了来自地区社区老年人中心的患者。14 项研究在美国进行。我们还确定了 9 项正在进行的研究。所有研究都应用了一种或多种旨在改善痴呆症患者生理睡眠的非药物干预措施。最常被检查的单一干预措施是某种形式的光疗法(6 项研究),5 项研究包括体育或社交活动,3 项照顾者干预措施,1 项日间睡眠限制,1 项缓慢 strokes 背部按摩,1 项经颅电刺激。7 项研究检查了多模态复杂干预措施。由于不完整的报告,纳入研究的偏倚风险常常不清楚。因此,我们将没有一项研究评为低偏倚风险。我们不确定光疗法对睡眠相关结局是否有任何影响(非常低确定性证据)。体育活动可能会略微增加总夜间睡眠时间和睡眠效率,并可能减少夜间总觉醒时间和夜间觉醒次数(低确定性证据)。社交活动可能会略微增加总夜间睡眠时间和睡眠效率(低确定性证据)。照顾者干预措施可能会适度增加总夜间睡眠时间,可能会略微提高睡眠效率,并可能适度减少夜间总觉醒时间(来自一项研究的低确定性证据)。多模态干预措施可能会适度增加总夜间睡眠时间,并可能适度减少夜间总觉醒时间,但可能对觉醒次数没有明显影响(来自低确定性证据的一项研究)。我们对多模态干预措施对睡眠效率的影响不确定(非常低确定性证据)。我们发现低确定性证据表明,日间睡眠限制、缓慢 strokes 背部按摩和经颅电刺激可能对睡眠相关结局没有明显影响。只有两项研究报告了不良事件的信息,仅在干预组中检测到少数此类事件。

作者结论

尽管纳入了 19 项随机对照试验,但关于痴呆症患者睡眠问题的非药物干预措施仍缺乏确凿证据。尽管单一或多模态干预措施都不能以足够的确定性改善睡眠,但我们发现体育和社交活动以及照顾者干预措施有一些积极作用。未来的研究应使用严格的方法,根据当前关于复杂干预措施的制定和评估指南,开发和评估多模态干预措施的有效性。目前,没有一种单一或多模态的干预措施可以被明确确定为广泛应用的合适选择。

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