Sleep and Circadian Research Laboratory, Department of Psychiatry, Michigan Medicine, University of Michigan, 4250 Plymouth Road, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, USA.
Sleep and Circadian Research Laboratory, Department of Psychiatry, Michigan Medicine, University of Michigan, 4250 Plymouth Road, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, USA.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2023 May 1;246:109835. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2023.109835. Epub 2023 Mar 11.
Individuals with regular cannabis use demonstrate adverse health outcomes, yet infrequently seek treatment. Insomnia, a common co-occurring complaint, could be targeted to reduce cannabis use and improve functioning in these individuals. In an intervention development study, we refined and tested the preliminary efficacy of a telemedicine-delivered CBT for insomnia tailored to individuals with regular cannabis use for sleep (CBTi-CB-TM).
In this single-blind randomized trial, fifty-seven adults (43 women, mean age 37.6 ± 12.8 years) with chronic insomnia and cannabis use for sleep ≥3 times/week received CBTi-CB-TM (n = 30) or sleep hygiene education (SHE-TM, n = 27). Participants completed self-reported assessments of insomnia (Insomnia Severity Index [ISI]) and cannabis use (Timeline Followback [TLFB] and daily diary data) at pre-treatment, post-treatment, and 8-week follow-up.
ISI scores improved significantly more in the CBTi-CB-TM compared to SHE-TM condition (β = -2.83, se=0.84, P = 0.004, d=0.81). At 8-week follow-up, 18/30 (60.0 %) CBTi-CB-TM compared to 4/27 (14.8 %) SHE-TM participants were in remission from insomnia (X =12.8, P = 0.0003). The TLFB showed a small reduction in past 30-day cannabis use for both conditions (β = -0.10, se=0.05, P = 0.026); CBTi-CB-TM participants demonstrated greater post-treatment reductions in the % of days cannabis was used within 2 h of bedtime (-29.1 ± 7.9 % fewer days vs. 2.6 ± 8.0 % more days, P = 0.008).
CBTi-CB-TM is feasible, acceptable, and demonstrated preliminary efficacy for improving sleep and cannabis-related outcomes among non-treatment-seeking individuals with regular cannabis use for sleep. Although sample characteristics limit generalizability, these findings support the need for adequately powered randomized controlled trials with longer follow-up periods.
有规律地使用大麻的个体表现出不良的健康结果,但很少寻求治疗。失眠是一种常见的合并症,可以作为目标来减少这些个体的大麻使用量并改善其功能。在一项干预发展研究中,我们对针对有规律地使用大麻来改善睡眠的个体量身定制的远程医疗提供的认知行为疗法治疗失眠(CBTi-CB-TM)进行了改进和测试,初步评估了其疗效。
在这项单盲随机试验中,57 名成年人(43 名女性,平均年龄 37.6±12.8 岁)患有慢性失眠症且每周至少有 3 次使用大麻来改善睡眠,他们分别接受了 CBTi-CB-TM(n=30)或睡眠卫生教育(SHE-TM,n=27)。参与者在治疗前、治疗后和 8 周随访时完成了关于失眠(失眠严重程度指数 [ISI])和大麻使用(时间线回溯 [TLFB] 和每日日记数据)的自我报告评估。
与 SHE-TM 组相比,CBTi-CB-TM 组的 ISI 评分显著改善更多(β=-2.83,se=0.84,P=0.004,d=0.81)。在 8 周随访时,与 SHE-TM 组的 4/27(14.8%)相比,18/30(60.0%)的 CBTi-CB-TM 组参与者从失眠中缓解(X=12.8,P=0.0003)。TLFB 显示两种情况下过去 30 天的大麻使用量都有少量减少(β=-0.10,se=0.05,P=0.026);与 SHE-TM 组相比,CBTi-CB-TM 组参与者在睡前 2 小时内使用大麻的天数减少了(β=-29.1±7.9%,减少天数比增加天数多 2.6±8.0%,P=0.008)。
CBTi-CB-TM 是可行的、可接受的,并初步证明了在有规律地使用大麻来改善睡眠的非治疗寻求者中,对改善睡眠和大麻相关结果具有疗效。尽管样本特征限制了其普遍性,但这些发现支持需要进行更长随访时间的、充分的随机对照试验。