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Journal Article

Citation

Szuhany KL, Young A, Mauro C, García de la Garza A, Spandorfer J, Lubin R, Skritskaya NA, Hoeppner SS, Li M, Pace-Schott E, Zisook S, Reynolds CF, Shear MK, Simon NM. Depress. Anxiety 2020; 37(1): 73-80.

Affiliation

Department of Psychiatry, NYU School of Medicine, New York, New York.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1002/da.22929

PMID

31916662

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Complicated grief (CG) is characterized by persistent, impairing grief after losing a loved one. Little is known about sleep disturbance in CG. Baseline prevalence of subjective sleep disturbance, impact of treatment on sleep, and impact of mid-treatment sleep on CG and quality of life outcomes were examined in adults with CG in secondary analyses of a clinical trial.

METHODS: Patients with CG (n = 395, mean age =53.0; 78% female) were randomized to CGT+placebo, CGT+citalopram (CIT), CIT, or placebo. Subjective sleep disturbance was assessed by a grief-anchored sleep item (Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index: PSQI-1) and a four-item sleep subscale of the Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology (QIDS-4). Sleep disturbance was quantified as at least one QIDS-4 item with severity ≥2 or grief-related sleep disturbance ≥3 days a week for PSQI-1. Outcomes included the Inventory of Complicated Grief (ICG), Work and Social Adjustment Scale (WSAS), and Clinical Global Impressions Scale.

RESULTS: Baseline sleep disturbance prevalence was 91% on the QIDS-4 and 46% for the grief-anchored PSQI-1. Baseline CG severity was significantly associated with sleep disturbance (QIDS-4: p = .015; PSQI-1: p = .001) after controlling for comorbid depression and PTSD. Sleep improved with treatment; those receiving CGT+CIT versus CIT evidenced better endpoint sleep (p = .027). Mid-treatment QIDS-4 significantly predicted improvement on outcome measures (all p < .01), though only WSAS remained significant after adjustment for mid-treatment ICG (p = .02).

CONCLUSIONS: Greater CG severity is associated with poorer sleep beyond PTSD and depression comorbidity. Additional research including objective sleep measurement is needed to optimally elucidate and address sleep impairment associated with CG.

© 2020 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.


Language: en

Keywords

antidepressants; grief/bereavement/complicated grief; quality of life; sleep disorders; treatment

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