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Brief Interventions to Reduce Comorbid Alcohol and Cannabis Misuse and Sleep Impairment in Young Adults (Rest-Up RCT)

Brief Interventions to Reduce Comorbid Alcohol and Cannabis Misuse and Sleep Impairment in Young Adults (Rest-Up RCT)

Recruiting
18-29 years
All
Phase N/A

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Overview

This study is designed to evaluate an integrated intervention to reduce alcohol and marijuana use and consequences and improve sleep among young adults with comorbid heavy episodic drinking, marijuana use, and sleep impairment.

Description

This study is designed to evaluate an integrated brief intervention to reduce alcohol and cannabis use and consequences and improve sleep among young adults (YA) with comorbid heavy episodic drinking (HED), cannabis misuse, and sleep impairment. HED in YA is an important public health problem; consequences include accidental injury and death, academic/work problems, unsafe and unwanted sex, and development of alcohol use disorders. Many YA with HED also use cannabis and experience increased harm as a result. Sleep impairment is common and problematic among YA, identified as one of 5 leading barriers to academic success for students and an important risk factor for mental health problems and suicide in YA. More than 75% of YA report frequent daytime fatigue, 27% extreme distress related to sleep problems, and more than 1 in 4 are at high risk for insomnia. Alcohol use has been linked to insomnia in adolescent, YA, and older adult populations, with bidirectional causal links between alcohol use and impaired sleep. Comorbidity of HED and sleep impairment is associated with increased consequences of alcohol use and exacerbates risk of accidents (including automobile accidents), impaired decision-making, and work and academic difficulties. Similar bidirectional relations exist with cannabis use and sleep, and co-use of these substances may be particularly harmful for sleep. Despite these risks, alcohol and cannabis prevention programs rarely target sleep directly, and the majority of YA sleep interventions either focus on sleep hygiene broadly in the absence of specific strategies to improve sleep or reduce alcohol/cannabis use or have insufficient sample size and duration to truly evaluate impacts on sleep or related comorbid alcohol or cannabis use. Building on the investigators' successful R34 intervention development project, the current study addresses these gaps by evaluating efficacy of integrating a brief sleep intervention (BBTI) with an efficacious brief alcohol and cannabis intervention (BASICS/Cannabis BMI) to increase magnitude and duration of effects on sleep and alcohol and cannabis misuse among a diverse community sample of YA with comorbid insomnia, HED, and cannabis use. Given bidirectional influences between sleep impairment and alcohol/cannabis misuse leading to significant public health challenges for this population, an efficacious integrated treatment is imperative. Impact will be evaluated in a RCT comparing efficacy of telehealth-delivered, integrated BASICSSLEEP to BASICS/BMI only (BASICS+), BBTI only (SLEEP), and Attention control (AC). Surveys and daily diaries will assess alcohol, cannabis, and sleep at baseline, post-treatment, 3-, 6-, 12-, and 18-months. Specific aims are: (1) Evaluate comparative efficacy of BASICSSLEEP, BASICS+, and SLEEP in reducing alcohol/cannabis use and consequences and improving sleep; (2) Evaluate moderators of efficacy for integrated and monotherapies; and (3) Use diary data to evaluate temporal sequencing of effects and duration/decay over time. Findings will remedy important gaps in the literature and result in a scalable, accessible new resource to address this important and costly comorbidity.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Participants must: 1) be 18-29 years old; 2) reside in Washington State; 3) have valid email address; 4) score on the Insomnia Severity Index (ISI) of 10 or higher, indicating at least a moderate score (score of 2 or more) on one or more of the first three items of the ISI measuring difficulty falling asleep, staying asleep, or waking up too early; 5a) report at least two heavy drinking episodes (4+ drinks for women /gender diverse, 5+ for men in a 2-hour period) in the past month; or 5b) 1 heavy drinking occasion and at least 4 total drinking occasions in the past month; 6) have used cannabis 4+ times in the past month; and 7) did not participate in the R34 pilot feasibility trial on which the current RCT is based.

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Participants that don't meet inclusion criteria and/or failure to consent to further participation.

Study details
    Insomnia
    Alcohol Use
    Marijuana Use

NCT06736444

University of Washington

13 May 2026

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