Porten Salomé, Friedmann Franziska, Schoofs Nikola, Barth Charlotte, Meyer Kristina, Santangelo Philip, Ebner-Priemer Ulrich, Müller-Engelmann Meike, Steil Regina, Kleindienst Nikolaus, Enning Frank, Fydrich Thomas, Priebe Kathlen
Department of Psychiatry and Neuroscience, Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin, corporate member of Freie Universität Berlin and Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Berlin, Germany.
Department of Psychology, Factulty of Life Sciences, Humboldt-University Berlin, Berlin, Germany.
Eur J Psychotraumatol. 2025 Dec;16(1):2542044. doi: 10.1080/20008066.2025.2542044. Epub 2025 Aug 27.
Most individuals with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) report sleep disturbances. Yet, results on the impact of trauma-focused therapy on subjective and objective sleep disturbances are inconsistent. This study conducted secondary analyses from a randomized controlled trial (RCT; German Clinical Trials Registration: DRKS00005578) to investigate changes in both subjective and objective sleep over the course of trauma-focused therapy and whether these changes differed for dialectical behaviour therapy for PTSD (DBT-PTSD) or cognitive processing therapy (CPT). Women with PTSD related to childhood abuse were randomized to receive DBT-PTSD or CPT. Sleep was assessed in = 180 women using the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI), sleep diaries, and actigraphy at baseline, 6 and 12 months into treatment, with sleep monitoring for 1 week at each assessment. Subjective sleep disturbances improved significantly from pre- to post-treatment, reflected in better PSQI scores ( = 0.76), sleep quality ( = 0.69), and total sleep time ( = 0.11) in sleep diary entries with no differences between treatment groups. No significant changes were observed in actigraphy measures. In total, 76% of participants still met the clinical cut-off of 5 on the PSQI, indicating clinically significant subjective sleep disturbances. PTSD treatments were linked to improvements in subjective sleep quality, but objective sleep measures remained unaffected. A high percentage of participants with persistent clinical sleep disturbances after treatment highlight the need for further research on the efficacy of PTSD treatments on sleep disturbances. To reduce the burden of sleep disturbances, sleep-specific treatment components may need to be added to trauma-focused treatments.
大多数创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)患者报告存在睡眠障碍。然而,关于创伤聚焦疗法对主观和客观睡眠障碍影响的研究结果并不一致。本研究对一项随机对照试验(RCT;德国临床试验注册编号:DRKS00005578)进行了二次分析,以调查在创伤聚焦疗法过程中主观和客观睡眠的变化,以及这些变化在PTSD辩证行为疗法(DBT-PTSD)或认知加工疗法(CPT)中是否存在差异。与童年期虐待相关的PTSD女性被随机分配接受DBT-PTSD或CPT。在治疗的基线期、6个月和12个月时,使用匹兹堡睡眠质量指数(PSQI)、睡眠日记和活动记录仪对180名女性进行睡眠评估,每次评估时进行1周的睡眠监测。从治疗前到治疗后,主观睡眠障碍有显著改善,这反映在PSQI评分更好(=0.76)、睡眠质量更好(=0.69)以及睡眠日记条目中总睡眠时间更长(=0.11),治疗组之间无差异。在活动记录仪测量中未观察到显著变化。总体而言,76%的参与者在PSQI上仍达到临床临界值5,表明存在临床上显著的主观睡眠障碍。PTSD治疗与主观睡眠质量的改善有关,但客观睡眠指标仍未受影响。治疗后仍有高比例的参与者存在持续性临床睡眠障碍,这突出表明需要进一步研究PTSD治疗对睡眠障碍的疗效。为减轻睡眠障碍的负担,可能需要在创伤聚焦治疗中加入针对睡眠的治疗成分。