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This project is a single center, prospective randomized controlled trial (N=198) primarily evaluating the efficacy of the Survivorship Sleep Program vs. Enhanced Usual Care on insomnia severity among cancer survivors. The investigators will also examine secondary outcomes associated with cancer-related insomnia including subjective and objective sleep measures (i.e., sleep diaries, actigraphy), emotional distress, fatigue, and use of sleep medications. Notably, most CBT-I trials with cancer survivors who have completed primary treatment with curative intent (i.e., curvivors) but not those in treatment or living with metastatic cancer (i.e., metavivors). To enhance generalizability, this RCT will stratify enrollment by survivorship phase (1:1:1). This project in strengthened by partnerships with community organizations (SurvivorJourneys and Ellie Fund) and use of both quantitative (i.e., surveys, actigraphy) and qualitative methods (i.e., interviews) to inform considerations for future implementation. Collectively, the proposed project will yield multiple deliverables to innovate cancer survivorship care, namely an efficacious, virtually delivered intervention addressing chronic insomnia, one of the most deleterious concerns among the growing population of cancer survivors in the US. Findings will inform a future effectiveness trial and the expansion of the synchronous delivery of CBT-I to survivors across different phases of cancer survivorship.
Background: 30-50% of cancer survivors have untreated insomnia. Cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I) is a first line, evidence-based treatment that is currently limited by few delivery options, lack of targeted content addressing cancer-related barriers to sleep, and limited testing by survivorship phase. With ACS pilot funding, the investigators previously developed a synchronous, virtual CBT-I program for cancer survivors (Survivorship Sleep Program; SSP) and conducted a pilot RCT demonstrating its feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary efficacy vs. enhanced usual care (EUC; CBT-I referral + sleep hygiene handout). The SSP, delivered in 6 weeks via 4 sessions + 1 booster session, is now ready for efficacy testing with a large, diverse sample including survivors who have completed primary treatment with curative intent (i.e., curvivors), survivors currently in treatment, and survivors living with metastatic cancer (i.e., metavivors). Objective/Hypothesis: Our primary hypothesis is that the SSP (vs. EUC) will lead to significant reductions in cancer survivors' insomnia severity and secondary sleep-related outcomes. Specific Aims: Aim 1 is to evaluate the efficacy of the SSP (vs. EUC) on the primary outcome change in insomnia severity (Insomnia Severity Index) from T0 (baseline) to T2 (4-week follow-up/10 weeks). Aim 2 is to examine changes from T0 though T3 (12-week follow-up/18 weeks) in outcomes commonly associated with cancer-related insomnia, including sleep diary and actigraphy sleep metrics (e.g., sleep efficiency), emotional distress (i.e., PROMIS depression and anxiety), daytime fatigue, use of sleep medications. Aim 3 is to characterize potential differences by cancer survivorship phase. Study Design: The investigators propose to conduct a fully powered efficacy RCT (N=198, 1:1) evaluating the SSP (n=99) vs. EUC (n=99) among cancer survivors with insomnia. All study delivery and data collection will be conducted virtually and in close partnership with SurvivorJourneys and Ellie Fund, our community partners on this proposal. Enrollment will be stratified by 3 phases of cancer survivorship (n=66/phase, balanced between study arms). Assessments will occur at T0, T1 (6 weeks), T2, and T3. Group-by-time effects will be explicated by survivorship phase. Exit interviews assessing acceptability (enjoyableness, convenience, helpfulness, overall satisfaction) will be coded deductively (e.g., most/least) and inductively (e.g., preferences, challenges, and future delivery considerations) to extract themes by survivorship phase. Relevance: Collectively, the proposed project will yield multiple deliverables to innovate cancer survivorship care, chiefly an efficacious, scalable, virtually-delivered intervention that addresses chronic insomnia, one of the most deleterious concerns among the growing demographic of cancer survivors in the U.S. Findings will inform a future effectiveness trial and the expansion of the synchronous delivery of CBT-I to survivors across different phases of cancer survivorship.
Age
All ages
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No
Massachusetts General Hospital
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Start Date
January 1, 2025
Primary Completion Date
January 31, 2028
Completion Date
December 28, 2028
Last Updated
March 13, 2026
198
ESTIMATED participants
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy - Insomnia
BEHAVIORAL
Enhanced Usual Care
BEHAVIORAL
Lead Sponsor
Massachusetts General Hospital
Collaborators
NCT06983080
NCT06567210
Data Source & Attribution
This clinical trial information is sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov, a service of the U.S. National Institutes of Health.
Modifications: This data has been reformatted for display purposes. Eligibility criteria have been parsed into inclusion/exclusion sections. Location data has been geocoded to enable distance-based search. For the authoritative and most current information, please visit ClinicalTrials.gov.
Neither the United States Government nor Clareo Health make any warranties regarding the data. Check ClinicalTrials.gov frequently for updates.
View ClinicalTrials.gov Terms and ConditionsNCT04545606