Principal Investigator

Oxana G
Palesh
Awardee Organization

Virginia Commonwealth University
United States

Fiscal Year
2024
Activity Code
R01
Early Stage Investigator Grants (ESI)
Not Applicable
Project End Date

Multicenter Randomized Controlled Trial of Brief Behavioral Therapy for Cancer Related Insomnia

Sleep disturbances, particularly insomnia, are prevalent in cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy. Our clinically based Brief Behavioral Therapy for Cancer-Related Insomnia (BBT-CI) is a new approach for treating insomnia symptoms during cancer care and can serve as a model for other behavioral interventions during medical treatment. Our design allows us to capture patients just as they are developing insomnia symptoms, but before their problems become chronic and require more intensive intervention. Our behavioral intervention is innovative because we can deliver it in tandem with patients’ biomedical treatments, at the bedside, which significantly reduces patient burden. BBT-CI is a brief (2 face-to-face meetings, four 15-minute phone calls), feasible and acceptable intervention that has shown promise in reducing insomnia and other cancer-related side effects and in improving circadian rhythms at four community oncology clinic sites. Methods: The proposed project will test the efficacy of a novel BBT-CI in multiple private practice clinical oncology settings (n=20) across the country through the University of Rochester Cancer Center NCI Community Oncology Research Program (NCORP). We propose to randomize 400 cancer patients receiving chemotherapy to either BBT-CI or Healthy EAting Education Learning for healthy sleep (HEAL). Our HEAL control condition has been tested in our preliminary trial and is matched to BBT-CI for time and attention while excluding active components of the BBT-CI intervention (i.e., stimulus control, physical activity, circadian entrainment). The proposed innovative study will: 1) test the efficacy of a novel BBT-CI intervention in a community setting (NCORP network), 2) train nurses and clinical assistants to deliver the intervention in the infusion clinic, making it easier to disseminate in the future, and 3) elucidate the psychophysiology of insomnia and treatment response by collecting physiological circadian and autonomic nervous system markers. The proposed study aims to change the paradigm of how behavioral treatments can be delivered by creating and delivering the intervention in tandem with acute cancer care.

Publications

  • Benedict C, Fisher S, Kumar D, Pollom E, Schapira L, Kurian AW, Berek JS, Palesh O. Examining Associations Among Sexual Health, Unmet Care Needs, and Distress in Breast and Gynecologic Cancer Survivors. Seminars in oncology nursing. 2022 Dec;38(6):151316. Epub 2022 Jul 25. PMID: 35902337
  • Palesh O, Solomon N, Hofmeister E, Jo B, Shen H, Cassidy-Eagle E, Innominato PF, Mustian K, Kesler S. A novel approach to management of sleep-associated problems in patients with breast cancer (MOSAIC) during chemotherapy : A pilot study. Sleep. 2020 Oct 13;43. (10). PMID: 32274500
  • Palesh O, Tolby LT, Hofmeister EN, Fisher S, Solomon NL, Sackeyfio S, Berek JS, Kurian AW, Cassidy-Eagle E, Schapira L. Symptoms and survivorship needs differences between "good sleepers" and "bad sleepers" in survivors of breast and gynecologic cancers. Sleep medicine. 2022 Dec;100:49-55. Epub 2022 Jul 10. PMID: 36007431
  • Woldeamanuel YW, Cowan RP. Computerized migraine diagnostic tools: a systematic review. Therapeutic advances in chronic disease. 2022 Jan 24;13:20406223211065235. doi: 10.1177/20406223211065235. eCollection 2022. PMID: 35096362
  • Woldeamanuel YW, Blayney DW, Jo B, Fisher SE, Benedict C, Oakley-Girvan I, Kesler SR, Palesh O. Headache outcomes of a sleep behavioral intervention in breast cancer survivors: Secondary analysis of a randomized clinical trial. Cancer. 2021 Dec 1;127(23):4492-4503. Epub 2021 Aug 6. PMID: 34357593
  • Tolby LT, Hofmeister EN, Fisher S, Chao S, Benedict C, Kurian AW, Berek JS, Schapira L, Palesh OG. Patterns of social media use and associations with psychosocial outcomes among breast and gynecologic cancer survivors. Journal of cancer survivorship : research and practice. 2021 Oct;15(5):677-684. Epub 2020 Nov 8. PMID: 33161562
  • Benedict C, Fisher S, Schapira L, Chao S, Sackeyfio S, Sullivan T, Pollom E, Berek JS, Kurian AW, Palesh O. Greater financial toxicity relates to greater distress and worse quality of life among breast and gynecologic cancer survivors. Psycho-oncology. 2022 Jan;31(1):9-20. Epub 2021 Aug 19. PMID: 34224603
  • Zeidman A, Benedict C, Zion SR, Fisher S, Tolby L, Kurian AW, Berek JS, Woldeamanuel YW, Schapira L, Palesh O. Association of illness mindsets with health-related quality of life in cancer survivors. Health psychology : official journal of the Division of Health Psychology, American Psychological Association. 2022 Jun;41(6):389-395. PMID: 35604702