An integrated behavioral treatment for improving nocturia and insomnia symptoms in older adults (MINT): study protocol for a multi-site randomized clinical trial
Constance H. Fung, Courtney J. Bolstad, Alison Huang, Alayne Markland, Jing Cheng, Cathy Alessi, Theodore M. Johnson, Donald L. Bliwise, Jennifer L. Martin, Kathryn L. Burgio, Michael Schembri, Erin Der-McLeod, Taressa Sergent, Camille P. Vaughan

TL;DR
This study tests a combined behavioral treatment for older adults with frequent nighttime urination and insomnia, aiming to improve sleep and daytime function.
Contribution
The study introduces an integrated non-pharmacological treatment combining CBT-I and pelvic floor therapy for nocturia and insomnia.
Findings
The trial will assess the efficacy of an integrated behavioral treatment on reducing nocturia frequency.
Secondary outcomes include improvements in sleep quality and insomnia symptoms.
The program aims to address nocturia's complex, multi-specialty causes efficiently and safely.
Abstract
Nocturia (i.e., waking to void during the primary sleep period) of two or more times per night affects nearly one-third of older adults and can have a severe impact on sleep, contributing to insomnia symptoms. Current treatment approaches for nocturia often overlook non-lower urinary tract factors that may contribute to nighttime awakenings. Nocturia management, for example, may benefit from more effective integration of cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I) principles that address other factors underlying insomnia symptoms, and early evidence suggests it also reduces nocturia and the bother it causes. Because nocturia treatment crosses specialties, coordinated delivery of urological and sleep therapies is a treatment barrier. The overall purpose of this trial is to determine whether a promising coordinated, integrated behavioral, non-pharmacological, non-surgical treatment…
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Taxonomy
TopicsUrinary Bladder and Prostate Research · Sleep and related disorders · Sleep and Work-Related Fatigue
