Impact of non-pharmacological interventions targeting sleep disturbances or disorders in patients with inflammatory arthritis: A systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized trials

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Standard

Impact of non-pharmacological interventions targeting sleep disturbances or disorders in patients with inflammatory arthritis : A systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized trials. / Latocha, Kristine M.; Løppenthin, Katrine B.; Al-Bazy, Safa; Albrechtsen, Tannie L.; Jensen, Helle E.; Østergaard, Mikkel; Jennum, Poul J.; Esbensen, Bente A.; Christensen, Robin.

In: Arthritis Care & Research, Vol. 74, No. 12, 2022, p. 2108-2118.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Latocha, KM, Løppenthin, KB, Al-Bazy, S, Albrechtsen, TL, Jensen, HE, Østergaard, M, Jennum, PJ, Esbensen, BA & Christensen, R 2022, 'Impact of non-pharmacological interventions targeting sleep disturbances or disorders in patients with inflammatory arthritis: A systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized trials', Arthritis Care & Research, vol. 74, no. 12, pp. 2108-2118. https://doi.org/10.1002/acr.24731

APA

Latocha, K. M., Løppenthin, K. B., Al-Bazy, S., Albrechtsen, T. L., Jensen, H. E., Østergaard, M., Jennum, P. J., Esbensen, B. A., & Christensen, R. (2022). Impact of non-pharmacological interventions targeting sleep disturbances or disorders in patients with inflammatory arthritis: A systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized trials. Arthritis Care & Research, 74(12), 2108-2118. https://doi.org/10.1002/acr.24731

Vancouver

Latocha KM, Løppenthin KB, Al-Bazy S, Albrechtsen TL, Jensen HE, Østergaard M et al. Impact of non-pharmacological interventions targeting sleep disturbances or disorders in patients with inflammatory arthritis: A systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized trials. Arthritis Care & Research. 2022;74(12):2108-2118. https://doi.org/10.1002/acr.24731

Author

Latocha, Kristine M. ; Løppenthin, Katrine B. ; Al-Bazy, Safa ; Albrechtsen, Tannie L. ; Jensen, Helle E. ; Østergaard, Mikkel ; Jennum, Poul J. ; Esbensen, Bente A. ; Christensen, Robin. / Impact of non-pharmacological interventions targeting sleep disturbances or disorders in patients with inflammatory arthritis : A systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized trials. In: Arthritis Care & Research. 2022 ; Vol. 74, No. 12. pp. 2108-2118.

Bibtex

@article{a58cf07aab0c482d946575e126f35f29,
title = "Impact of non-pharmacological interventions targeting sleep disturbances or disorders in patients with inflammatory arthritis: A systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized trials",
abstract = "ObjectivesPatients with inflammatory arthritis (IA) have a high risk of sleep disturbances and disorders. The objective was to evaluate the evidence of non-pharmacological interventions targeting sleep disturbances or disorders in patients with IA.MethodsA systematic search was undertaken from inception to September 8th, 2020. We included randomized trials concerning non-pharmacological interventions applied in adults with IA and concomitant sleep disturbances or disorders. Primary outcome was the sleep domain while secondary outcomes were core outcome domains for IA trials and harms. The Cochrane Risk of Bias tool was applied, and the overall quality of the evidence was assessed using GRADE. Effect sizes for continuous outcomes were based on the standardized mean difference, combined using random-effects meta-analysis.ResultsSix trials (308 patients) were included in the quantitative synthesis; three of these reported improvement in sleep in favor of the non-pharmacological intervention(s). The meta-analysis of the sleep domains indicated a large clinical effect of -0.80 (95% CI, -1.33 to -0.28) in favor of non-pharmacological interventions targeting sleep disturbances or disorders. The estimate was rated down twice for risk of bias, and unexplained inconsistency; this was assessed as corresponding to low quality evidence. None of the secondary core outcomes used in contemporary IA trials indicated clinical benefit in favor of non-pharmacological interventions targeting sleep.ConclusionNon-pharmacological interventions targeting sleep disturbances/disorders in patients with IA indicated a promising effect on sleep outcomes, but not yet with convincing evidence.",
author = "Latocha, {Kristine M.} and L{\o}ppenthin, {Katrine B.} and Safa Al-Bazy and Albrechtsen, {Tannie L.} and Jensen, {Helle E.} and Mikkel {\O}stergaard and Jennum, {Poul J.} and Esbensen, {Bente A.} and Robin Christensen",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.1002/acr.24731",
language = "English",
volume = "74",
pages = "2108--2118",
journal = "Arthritis Care & Research",
issn = "2151-464X",
publisher = "Wiley",
number = "12",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Impact of non-pharmacological interventions targeting sleep disturbances or disorders in patients with inflammatory arthritis

T2 - A systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized trials

AU - Latocha, Kristine M.

AU - Løppenthin, Katrine B.

AU - Al-Bazy, Safa

AU - Albrechtsen, Tannie L.

AU - Jensen, Helle E.

AU - Østergaard, Mikkel

AU - Jennum, Poul J.

AU - Esbensen, Bente A.

AU - Christensen, Robin

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - ObjectivesPatients with inflammatory arthritis (IA) have a high risk of sleep disturbances and disorders. The objective was to evaluate the evidence of non-pharmacological interventions targeting sleep disturbances or disorders in patients with IA.MethodsA systematic search was undertaken from inception to September 8th, 2020. We included randomized trials concerning non-pharmacological interventions applied in adults with IA and concomitant sleep disturbances or disorders. Primary outcome was the sleep domain while secondary outcomes were core outcome domains for IA trials and harms. The Cochrane Risk of Bias tool was applied, and the overall quality of the evidence was assessed using GRADE. Effect sizes for continuous outcomes were based on the standardized mean difference, combined using random-effects meta-analysis.ResultsSix trials (308 patients) were included in the quantitative synthesis; three of these reported improvement in sleep in favor of the non-pharmacological intervention(s). The meta-analysis of the sleep domains indicated a large clinical effect of -0.80 (95% CI, -1.33 to -0.28) in favor of non-pharmacological interventions targeting sleep disturbances or disorders. The estimate was rated down twice for risk of bias, and unexplained inconsistency; this was assessed as corresponding to low quality evidence. None of the secondary core outcomes used in contemporary IA trials indicated clinical benefit in favor of non-pharmacological interventions targeting sleep.ConclusionNon-pharmacological interventions targeting sleep disturbances/disorders in patients with IA indicated a promising effect on sleep outcomes, but not yet with convincing evidence.

AB - ObjectivesPatients with inflammatory arthritis (IA) have a high risk of sleep disturbances and disorders. The objective was to evaluate the evidence of non-pharmacological interventions targeting sleep disturbances or disorders in patients with IA.MethodsA systematic search was undertaken from inception to September 8th, 2020. We included randomized trials concerning non-pharmacological interventions applied in adults with IA and concomitant sleep disturbances or disorders. Primary outcome was the sleep domain while secondary outcomes were core outcome domains for IA trials and harms. The Cochrane Risk of Bias tool was applied, and the overall quality of the evidence was assessed using GRADE. Effect sizes for continuous outcomes were based on the standardized mean difference, combined using random-effects meta-analysis.ResultsSix trials (308 patients) were included in the quantitative synthesis; three of these reported improvement in sleep in favor of the non-pharmacological intervention(s). The meta-analysis of the sleep domains indicated a large clinical effect of -0.80 (95% CI, -1.33 to -0.28) in favor of non-pharmacological interventions targeting sleep disturbances or disorders. The estimate was rated down twice for risk of bias, and unexplained inconsistency; this was assessed as corresponding to low quality evidence. None of the secondary core outcomes used in contemporary IA trials indicated clinical benefit in favor of non-pharmacological interventions targeting sleep.ConclusionNon-pharmacological interventions targeting sleep disturbances/disorders in patients with IA indicated a promising effect on sleep outcomes, but not yet with convincing evidence.

U2 - 10.1002/acr.24731

DO - 10.1002/acr.24731

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 34121362

VL - 74

SP - 2108

EP - 2118

JO - Arthritis Care & Research

JF - Arthritis Care & Research

SN - 2151-464X

IS - 12

ER -

ID: 276647662