Abstract
Poor sleep quality is common among Veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and history of traumatic brain injury (TBI). However, the relationship between sleep quality and treatment outcomes following trauma-focused interventions is less well-understood in this population. We sought to better understand whether 1) sleep quality changed as a result of trauma-focused treatment and 2) if baseline sleep quality moderated psychological and neurobehavioral treatment outcomes. Our sample consisted of 100 Iraq/Afghanistan era Veterans with PTSD and history of mild to moderate TBI who were randomized to one of two trauma-focused treatments: 1) Cognitive Processing Therapy (CPT) or 2) combined CPT and Cognitive Symptom Management and Rehabilitation Therapy (SMART-CPT). Self-reported sleep quality, psychiatric symptoms (PTSD and depression), and neurobehavioral concerns were assessed at multiple timepoints throughout the study. Multilevel modeling showed sleep quality did not improve, regardless of treatment condition. However, worse baseline sleep quality was associated with less improvement in PTSD symptoms and cognitive complaints. There was no effect of baseline sleep quality on change in depression symptoms. These findings suggest that more targeted treatments to address sleep quality either prior to or in conjunction with trauma-focused therapy may help to improve treatment outcomes for Veterans with comorbid PTSD and TBI history.
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