Quesnel, C., Savard, J., Simard, S., Ivers, H., & Morin, C. M. (2003). Efficacy of cognitive-behavioral therapy for insomnia in women treated for nonmetastatic breast cancer. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 71, 189–200.
Patients received multimodal cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) that combined cognitive, behavioral, and educational strategies. Treatment consisted of eight weekly sessions administered in a group of five participants combined with use of stimulus control, sleep restriction, cognitive therapy, sleep hygiene, and fatigue and stress management. The treatment protocol was based on clinical procedures developed by Morin (1993) and adapted by the investigators for the cancer population.
Ten breast cancer survivors participated in this pilot study.
Patients were included in the study if they
Patients who regularly used psychotropic medications other than hypnotics were excluded unless the dosage use was stable in the last month and did not increase during the study. Individuals currently receiving psychotherapy were also excluded.
Patients were undergoing the long-term follow-up phase of care.
This was a single-arm study with no control group.
Multidimensional Fatigue Inventory (MFI)
Nonparametric statistical testing revealed significant improvements in the general and physical subscales of the MFI; there was no significant change between pre- and posttreatment on the mental, activities, and motivation subscales of the MFI. There was no significant change observed from posttreatment through six-month follow-up on the MFI general and physical subscales, suggesting that the treatment gains were sustained over time.