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Not Yet RecruitingNCT07119567

Impact of Cocaine Use and Withdrawal on Sleep

Longitudinal Exploration of Subjective and Objective Sleep Characteristics in Patients With Cocaine Use Disorder During the Withdrawal Process

Status
Not Yet Recruiting
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
32 (estimated)
Sponsor
Hôpital le Vinatier · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

This study investigates how cocaine use and withdrawal affect sleep and circadian rhythms in individuals undergoing inpatient detoxification. Using wearable sleep monitors, actigraphy, questionnaires, and hormonal biomarkers, it aims to capture both objective and subjective changes in sleep across three key stages: active use, early withdrawal, and late withdrawal. The study is unique in its ability to explore sleep microstructure, the circadian system's role via melatonin and cortisol measurements, and the dynamic relationship between subjective sleep perception and objective sleep data. It also examines whether sleep quality may serve as a predictive marker of long-term withdrawal success.

Detailed description

Sleep disturbances are a common but poorly understood feature of cocaine use disorder, and may play a critical role in both relapse vulnerability and treatment outcomes. This interventional study aims to explore objective and subjective sleep patterns, as well as circadian regulation, across three distinct phases: during active cocaine use, early withdrawal, and late withdrawal. Participants will be individuals scheduled for supervised inpatient detoxification. The study employs a multimodal assessment strategy: * Ambulatory polysomnography using the Somfit® device will allow analysis of both macro- and microstructure of sleep across two nights per visit. * Actigraphy will be used to capture precise temporal dynamics of sleep-wake rhythm over the course of the study. * Subjective measures will include validated self-report questionnaires on sleep quality, insomnia severity, sleepiness, fatigue, and sleep perception. * Urinary biomarkers (free cortisol and 6-sulfatoxymelatonin, collected 5 times/day) will provide data on circadian rhythm integrity, enabling exploration of the role of circadian dysregulation in sleep disturbances. A key originality of the study lies in its ability to dynamically assess the relationship between subjective and objective sleep parameters and to explore the circadian contribution to sleep disruption in cocaine users. Furthermore, by following patients through early and late withdrawal, the study will investigate whether sleep parameters could serve as predictive markers of long-term withdrawal success, offering potential targets for future therapeutic interventions.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERMultimodal Sleep and Biomarker AssessmentParticipants will undergo non-invasive sleep assessments including polysomnography recordings (using the Somfit® device), actigraphy, self-reported questionnaires (on sleep, substance use), and urinary biomarker collection (for cortisol and melatonin levels) at three distinct stages of their substance use/withdrawal timeline.

Timeline

Start date
2025-09-15
Primary completion
2028-03-15
Completion
2028-06-01
First posted
2025-08-13
Last updated
2025-08-13

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07119567. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.