Feasibility and preliminary efficacy for morning bright light therapy to improve sleep and plasma biomarkers in US Veterans with TBI. A prospective, open-label, single-arm trial.
Jonathan E ElliottAlisha A McBrideNadir M BalbaStanley V ThomasCassandra L PattinsonBenjamin J MorascoAndrea WilkersonJessica M GillMiranda M LimPublished in: PloS one (2022)
Mild traumatic brain injury (TBI) is associated with persistent sleep-wake dysfunction, including insomnia and circadian rhythm disruption, which can exacerbate functional outcomes including mood, pain, and quality of life. Present therapies to treat sleep-wake disturbances in those with TBI (e.g., cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia) are limited by marginal efficacy, poor patient acceptability, and/or high patient/provider burden. Thus, this study aimed to assess the feasibility and preliminary efficacy of morning bright light therapy, to improve sleep in Veterans with TBI (NCT03578003). Thirty-three Veterans with history of TBI were prospectively enrolled in a single-arm, open-label intervention using a lightbox (~10,000 lux at the eye) for 60-minutes every morning for 4-weeks. Pre- and post-intervention outcomes included questionnaires related to sleep, mood, TBI, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and pain; wrist actigraphy as a proxy for objective sleep; and blood-based biomarkers related to TBI/sleep. The protocol was rated favorably by ~75% of participants, with adherence to the lightbox and actigraphy being ~87% and 97%, respectively. Post-intervention improvements were observed in self-reported symptoms related to insomnia, mood, and pain; actigraphy-derived measures of sleep; and blood-based biomarkers related to peripheral inflammatory balance. The severity of comorbid PTSD was a significant positive predictor of response to treatment. Morning bright light therapy is a feasible and acceptable intervention that shows preliminary efficacy to treat disrupted sleep in Veterans with TBI. A full-scale randomized, placebo-controlled study with longitudinal follow-up is warranted to assess the efficacy of morning bright light therapy to improve sleep, biomarkers, and other TBI related symptoms.
Keyphrases
- sleep quality
- traumatic brain injury
- mild traumatic brain injury
- open label
- physical activity
- randomized controlled trial
- severe traumatic brain injury
- depressive symptoms
- clinical trial
- chronic pain
- study protocol
- phase iii
- type diabetes
- pain management
- squamous cell carcinoma
- bipolar disorder
- phase ii
- case report
- neuropathic pain
- radiation therapy
- stem cells
- phase ii study
- spinal cord
- cell therapy
- cross sectional
- placebo controlled
- weight loss
- replacement therapy
- combination therapy
- gestational age