| Literature DB >> 31708806 |
Constance H Fung1,2, Jennifer L Martin1,2, Cathy Alessi1,2, Joseph M Dzierzewski3, Ian A Cook4,5, Alison Moore6, Austin Grinberg1,2, Michelle Zeidler1,2, Lara Kierlin7.
Abstract
Chronic use of hypnotic medications such as benzodiazepines is associated with adverse consequences including increased risk of falls. Efforts to help patients discontinue these medications have had varying levels of success. We developed a blinded (masked) tapering protocol to help patients taper off hypnotics. In this blinded protocol, patients consented to a drug taper but agreed to forego knowledge about the specific tapering schedule or the actual dose each night until the end of the taper. Blinded tapering aims to reduce negative expectancies for withdrawal effects that may impair a patient's successful discontinuation of hypnotics. In preparation for a randomized trial, we tested the feasibility of adding a blinded tapering component to current best evidence practice [supervised hypnotic taper combined with cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBTI)] in 5 adult patients recruited from an outpatient mental health practice in Oregon. A compounding pharmacy prepared the blinded capsules for each patient. During the gradual blinded taper, each participant completed CBTI. Measures collected included feasibility/process (e.g., recruitment barriers), hypnotic use, the Dysfunctional Beliefs and Attitudes about Sleep Scale, Insomnia Severity Index, Epworth Sleepiness Scale, and Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (depressive symptoms). The intervention was feasible, and participants reported high satisfaction with the protocol and willingness to follow the same treatment again. All five participants successfully discontinued their hypnotic medication use post-treatment. Dysfunctional beliefs/attitudes about sleep and insomnia severity improved. Blinded tapering is a promising new method for improving hypnotic discontinuation among patients treated with a combination of hypnotic tapering plus CBTI.Entities:
Keywords: benzodiazepine discontinuation; cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia; medication taper; nocebo effect; placebo effect
Year: 2019 PMID: 31708806 PMCID: PMC6822133 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2019.00717
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia and supervised hypnotic tapering protocol.
| Week | CBTI (in-person on Day 1 of each week) | Medication |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Overview of methods involved, a review of mechanisms that control sleep, and an introduction to stimulus control and sleep restriction as well as overview of sleep hygiene. Instructions on completion of the sleep diary | During each day of week 1, the probability of taking a capsule that contains full strength hypnotic is 50% and the probability of taking a capsule that contains ¾ strength was 50%*. |
| 2 | Sleep diary data reviewed. Adjustments to sleep plan made based upon calculated sleep efficiency (i.e., time asleep over time in bed [TIB] X 100). Per standardized CBTI program, participant time in bed (TIB) was adjusted to achieve a goal sleep efficiency of greater than 85%. CBTI troubleshooting of difficulties with the program, as well as addressing barriers to adherence (e.g., anxiety, problems with sleep restriction). | During each day of week 2, the probability of taking a capsule that contains ¾ strength hypnotic is 50% and the probability of taking a capsule that contains ½ strength was 50%. |
| 3 | Sleep diary data were reviewed and adjustments made to TIB to reflect either desire for more sleep (if 85% sleep efficiency has been met) or reduction of TIB (if sleep efficiency of 85% has not been achieved). Also involves discussion of relaxation techniques as well as paradoxical intention (i.e., an approach that involves instruction to try to stay awake) | During each day of week 3, the probability of taking a capsule that contains ½ strength hypnotic is 50% and the probability of taking a capsule that contains ¼ strength was 50%. |
| 4 | Sleep diary data were reviewed and adjustments made to TIB to reflect either desire for more sleep or reduction in TIB as above. Any new/ongoing problems with adherence were also reviewed and addressed. | During each day of week 4, the probability of taking a capsule that contains 1/4 strength hypnotic is 50% and the probability of taking a capsule that contains 0%strength was 50%. |
| 5 | Sleep diary data were reviewed and adjustments made to TIB to reflect either desire for more sleep or reduction in TIB as described above. Any new/ongoing problems with adherence were also reviewed and addressed. | During each day of week 5, the probability of taking a capsule that contains 1/4 strength hypnotic is 50% and the probability of taking a capsule that contains 0 strength was 50%. |
| 6 | Sleep diary data reviewed. Participants presented with instructions for contingency planning CBTI if sleep is derailed in the future. Participants had the opportunity to ask questions and were made aware that they may return on an as-needed basis. | During each day of week 6, the probability of taking a capsule that contains 0 strength was 100%. |
CBTI, cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia. *Within a single week, the dose may vary from day-to-day (e.g., the dose could be ¾ strength on day 1 and full-strength on day 2 and ¾ strength on day 3).
Description of cases.
| Case number | Age | Medication | Number of years of hypnotic use | Number of prior attempts to discontinue hypnotic use |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 64 | trazodone 25 mg | 10 | 2 |
| 2 | 49 | lorazepam 1 mg | 30 | 10 |
| 3 | 24 | zolpidem extended release 6.25 mg | 8 | 1 |
| 4 | 68 | trazodone 100 mg | 11 | 1 |
| 5 | 72 | trazodone 150 mg | 4 | 1 |
Feasibility results (N = 5 participants).
| Recruitment barriers: | Main barrier was financial (i.e., co-payment associated with 6 CBTI sessions). One prospective participant was unwilling to taper her hypnotic (zolpidem). |
| Participant satisfaction with protocol: | Participants were very satisfied with the protocol, although they wished they could have had all study medications provided at the initial session instead of in two parts (4 weeks, 2 weeks), which was due to insurance covering 30 days maximum per refill. |
| Program credibility measures: | Baseline mean was 20 (range 18 to 21) out of a possible range 4 to 24, where 24 = most credible. Participants all rated credibility as 24 at post-treatment (credibility data was missing in 2 participants). |
| Confidence that participant would follow the program at baseline: | 9 (range 6 to 10; possible range was 1 to 10, 10 = very confident) |
| Perceptions of importance of following the treatment to get better sleep: | 9 (range 8 to 10; possible range was 1 to 10, 10 = very important). |
| Satisfaction at post-treatment with the method of medication reduction: | 0.4 (range 0 to 1) out of possible range 0 to 4, where 0 = strongly agree |
| Willingness to follow the same treatment again: | 0.4 (range 0 to 1) out of possible range 0 to 4, where 0 = strongly agree |
| Willingness to follow the treatment recommendations: | 0.4 (range 0 to 1) out of possible range 0 to 4, where 0 = strongly agree |
CBTI, cognitive behavioural therapy for insomnia.
Sleep and mood measures descriptive statistics.
| Measure | Mean (SD) at baseline | Mean (SD) at post-treatment | Difference between post-treatment and baseline means |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dysfunctional Beliefs and Attitudes about Sleep-16 item | 4.8 (2.3) | 1.1 (−0.8) | −3.7 |
| Insomnia Severity Index | 17.8 (3.3) | 1.6 (2.1) | −16.2 |
| Epworth Sleepiness Scale | 4.6 (5.1) | 2.0 (1.4) | −2.6 |
| Patient Health Questionnaire-9 | 5.2 (7.6) | 0.6 (0.9) | −4.6 |
SD, standard deviation.
Figure 1Sleep onset latency during intervention (cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia and hypnotic taper).
Figure 5Sleep efficiency during intervention (cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia and hypnotic taper).
Figure 6Participants’ beliefs about their hypnotic doses during intervention (cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia and hypnotic taper). Participant 1 (baseline trazodone 25 mg) did not report any sleep on one day 24 during treatment due to an acute medical illness. Participant 2 took lorazepam 1 mg at baseline. Participant 3 took zolpidem extended release 6.25 mg at baseline. Participant 4 took trazodone 100 mg at baseline. Participant 5 took trazodone 150 mg at baseline.