Cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia to treat major depressive disorder with comorbid insomnia: A systematic review and meta-analysis
- PMID: 39242039
- DOI: 10.1016/j.jad.2024.09.017
Cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia to treat major depressive disorder with comorbid insomnia: A systematic review and meta-analysis
Abstract
Objective: Cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I) has demonstrated efficacy for both insomnia and depression. With a tenfold increase in expected participant numbers, we aimed to update the systematic review and meta-analysis of CBT-I for major depressive disorders (MDD).
Methods: Multiple databases were searched up to March 27th 2024 to include all randomized controlled trials examining CBT-I among adults with MDD. The certainty of evidence was evaluated using GRADE. The primary outcome was depression response at post-treatment. Secondary outcomes included insomnia remission and all-cause dropout at post-treatment. Frequentist random-effects pairwise meta-analyses were performed using odds ratio (OR) for dichotomous outcomes. This study was prospectively registered (https://osf.io/kcndz/).
Results: Nineteen trials with 4808 randomized participants were identified (mean age, 33.2 [standardized deviation 15.0] years, 73.2 % women. Mean Insomnia Severity Index 19.2 [5.4], median Patient Health Questionnaire-9 16 [range, 8-21]). CBT-I was more beneficial than control conditions for depression response (OR 2.28 [95 % Confidence Interval (CI), 1.67-3.12; GRADE certainty of evidence: moderate), insomnia remission (OR 3.57 [95%CI, 2.48-5.14]: moderate) but could lead to more dropout (OR 1.69 [95%CI, 0.98-2.89]: low). Depression improvement was seen beyond the sleep domain. With a control condition depression response rate of 17 % at post-treatment (median 8 weeks), CBT-I yielded a 32 % response rate (95 % CI, 26 %-39 %).
Conclusions: This meta-analysis indicates that CBT-I has significant effects on depressive symptoms beyond the sleep domain among people with MDD. Despite higher dropout rates, these findings suggest CBT-I is an effective treatment for depression comorbid with insomnia.
Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
Declaration of competing interest Y.F. has received consultancy fee from Panasonic and lecture fee from Otsuka outside the submitted work. H.N.T. is an employee of Awarefy Inc. M.S. reports personal fee from SONY outside submitted work. S.N. has received grants from JSPS KAKENHI (21H00956, 23H01050, 24 K00492), AMED(JP21zf0127005), and S'UIMIN Inc. R.Y. belongs to the Edogawa University Sleep Research Institute, which conducts joint research with Paramount Bed Holdings Co. Ltd. and receives research funds. E.S. has received grants from Mitsubishi Foundation within last 36 month, and is currently working as an occupational physician at Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Bank. M.P. wrote treatment manuals and books for CBTI, teaches CBTI, and is a founder of Hypknowledge LLC. K.Kasai. reports grants from Teijin, Takeda, Lily, Otsuka, Daiichi-Sankyo, Shionogi, Tanabe-Mitsubishi, and Sumitomo; and personal fees from Sumitomo, Meiji-Seika, Ricoh, Fuji-film Wako, Takeda, Otsuka, and Astellas outside the submitted work in the past 36 months. Others report no conflict of interest.
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