Epstein, D. R., & Dirksen, S. R. (2007). Randomized trial of a cognitive-behavioral intervention for insomnia in breast cancer survivors. Oncology Nursing Forum, 34, E51–E59.
To determine the efficacy of a cognitive-behavioral intervention for treating insomnia in survivors of breast cancer.
Participants were assigned to either a multicomponent intervention with stimulus control, sleep restriction, and sleep education and hygiene or a control intervention with sleep education and hygiene. Participants attended four weekly treatment group sessions (the first session was two hours and the other three were one hour) followed by two weekly 15- to 30-minute individual telephone sessions. Outcomes measures were sleep-onset latency, wake-after-sleep onset, total sleep time, time in bed, sleep efficiency, and sleep quality.
The study was conducted in university and medical center classrooms.
Patients were undergoing the follow-up phase of care.
This was a randomized, controlled trial.
After the intervention, based on daily sleep diaries, both groups improved in sleep-onset latency, wake-after-sleep onset, total sleep time, time in bed, sleep efficiency, and sleep quality. A between-group difference existed for time in bed. Wrist actigraph data showed significant pre- to postintervention changes for sleep-onset latency, wake-after-sleep onset, total sleep time, and time in bed. When compared to the control group, the multicomponent intervention group rated overall sleep as more improved.
A nonpharmacologic intervention is effective in the treatment of insomnia in survivors of breast cancer.