Journal article

Do sleep disturbances predict or moderate the response to psychotherapy in bipolar disorder?

LG Sylvia, S Salcedo, AT Peters, PV Da Silva Magalhães, E Frank, DJ Miklowitz, MW Otto, M Berk, AA Nierenberg, T Deckersbach

Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease | LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS | Published : 2017

Abstract

This study examined whether sleep disturbance predicted or moderated responses to psychotherapy in participants who participated in STEP-BD, a national, multisite study that examined the effectiveness of different treatment combinations for bipolar disorder. Participants received either a brief psychosocial intervention called collaborative care (CC; n = 130) or intensive psychotherapy (IP; n = 163),with study-based pharmacotherapy. Participants (N = 243) were defined as current (past week) short sleepers (<6 hours/night), normal sleepers (6.5-8.5 hours/night), and long sleepers (≥9 hours/night), according to reported average nightly sleep duration theweek before randomization. Sleep disturb..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by National Institute of Mental Health


Funding Acknowledgements

STEP-BD was funded in part by contract N01MH80001 from the National Institute of Mental Health (Gary Sachs). Support for the development of the psychosocial treatments was provided by grants MH29618 (E.F.), MH43931 (D.J.M.), and MH55101 (D.J.M.) from the National Institute of Mental Health and by the National Alliance for Research on Schizophrenia and Depression (D.J.M.).