{"type":"rich","version":"1.0","title":"New AASM Guidance on Combination Treatment for Chronic Insomnia","description":"Welcome to the NeurologyLive® Mind Moments® podcast. Tune in to hear leaders in neurology sound off on topics that impact your clinical practice.\n\nIn this Mind Moments episode, Todd Arnedt, PhD, professor of psychiatry and neurology at Michigan Medicine-University of Michigan, joins the podcast to discuss the recently published American Academy of Sleep Medicine clinical practice guideline on combination treatment for chronic insomnia disorder in adults. Arnedt explains the rationale behind formal recommendations for concurrent use of cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I) and pharmacotherapy, particularly as combination treatment becomes increasingly common in clinical practice.\n\nThe conversation reviews the evidence supporting CBT-I as the preferred foundational treatment approach, where combination therapy may offer advantages over pharmacotherapy alone, and how clinicians should think about factors such as symptom burden, treatment goals, access to CBT-I, and patient preference when selecting treatment strategies. Arnedt also outlines ongoing research gaps involving sequential treatment approaches, medication classes, long-term outcomes, and personalized insomnia care.\n\nLooking for more Sleep Disorders discussion? Check out the NeurologyLive® Sleep Disorders clinical focus page (https://www.neurologylive.com/clinical/sleep-medicine) .\n\nEpisode Breakdown:\n\n1:15 – Why formal insomnia combination treatment guidance was needed\n2:45 – Defining concurrent CBT-I and pharmacotherapy approaches\n4:35 – Evidence supporting CBT-I as foundational insomnia treatment\n7:15 – Situations where combination therapy may improve patient outcomes\n7:50 – Neurology News Network\n10:20 – Patient-specific factors influencing insomnia treatment selection\n12:30 – Barriers involving CBT-I access, cost, and real-world implementation\n16:55 – Research gaps surrounding sequencing, long-term outcomes, and personalization\n\nThe stories featured in this week's Neurology News Minute, which will give you quick updates on the following developments in neurology, are further detailed here:\n\nTopline Phase 2 CELIA Results Show Diranersen Misses Primary End Point in Early Alzheimer Disease (https://www.neurologylive.com/view/topline-phase-2-celia-results-show-diranersen-misses-primary-end-point-early-ad)\n\nFDA Grants Priority Review to Bayer’s Asundexian for Secondary Stroke Prevention (https://www.neurologylive.com/view/fda-grants-priority-review-bayer-asundexian-secondary-stroke-prevention)\n\nDyne Submits BLA for Z-Rostudirsen in Exon 51 Skipping Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (https://www.neurologylive.com/view/dyne-submits-bla-z-rostudirsen-exon-51-skipping-duchenne-muscular-dystrophy)\n\nThanks for listening to the NeurologyLive® Mind Moments® podcast. To support the show, be sure to rate, review, and subscribe wherever you listen to podcasts. For more neurology news and expert-driven content, visit neurologylive.com (http://neurologylive.com/) .","author_name":"NeurologyLive® Mind Moments®","author_url":"https://audioboom.com/channels/5001429-neurologylive-mind-moments","provider_name":"Audioboom","provider_url":"https://audioboom.com","width":480,"height":95,"thumbnail_url":"https://audioboom.com/i/39490422/600x600/c","thumbnail_width":600,"thumbnail_height":600,"html":"<iframe width=\"100%\" height=\"95\" src=\"https://embeds.audioboom.com/posts/8908858/embed?v=202301\" style=\"background-color: transparent; display: block; padding: 0; width: 100%\" frameborder=\"0\" allowtransparency=\"allowtransparency\" scrolling=\"no\" title=\"Audioboom player\" allow=\"autoplay\" sandbox=\"allow-downloads allow-forms allow-popups allow-same-origin allow-scripts allow-storage-access-by-user-activation allow-top-navigation-by-user-activation\"></iframe>"}
