OBJECTIVE: To determine if infants aged 6 to 15 months with frequent parent-reported nighttime awakenings require reduced parental aid during a week ofdiphenhydramine hydrochloridetreatment and 2 and 4 weeks after its discontinuation. DESIGN: Double-blind, randomized, controlled clinical trial. SETTING: The study was conducted from May 1, 2004, through May 1, 2005; patients were recruited nationally. PARTICIPANTS: Forty-four participants aged 6 to 15 months. INTERVENTIONS:Placebo or diphenhydramine was administered in infants 30 minutes before anticipated bedtime. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: The primary outcome was dichotomous: a parental report of improvement in the number of night awakenings requiring parental assistance during the intervention week, which ended on day 14. Secondary outcomes were improved sleep during the 2 weeks before days 29 and 43, parental overall happiness with sleep, and improved sleep latency. RESULTS: On June 6, 2005, the data safety monitoring board voted unanimously to stop the trial early because of lack of effectiveness of diphenhydramine over placebo. Only 1 of 22 children receiving diphenhydramine showed improvement compared with 3 of 22 receiving placebo. To reach the a priori determined sample size and have a positive outcome (ie, rejecting the null hypothesis), the trial would have needed to enroll 16 more participants in each arm, with 15 of the 16 in the diphenhydraminegroup and 0 of 16 in theplacebo group improving. CONCLUSION: During 1 week of therapy and at follow-up 2 and 4 weeks later, diphenhydramine was no more effective than placebo in reducing nighttime awakening or improving overall parental happiness with sleep for infants.
RCT Entities:
OBJECTIVE: To determine if infants aged 6 to 15 months with frequent parent-reported nighttime awakenings require reduced parental aid during a week of diphenhydramine hydrochloride treatment and 2 and 4 weeks after its discontinuation. DESIGN: Double-blind, randomized, controlled clinical trial. SETTING: The study was conducted from May 1, 2004, through May 1, 2005; patients were recruited nationally. PARTICIPANTS: Forty-four participants aged 6 to 15 months. INTERVENTIONS: Placebo or diphenhydramine was administered in infants 30 minutes before anticipated bedtime. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: The primary outcome was dichotomous: a parental report of improvement in the number of night awakenings requiring parental assistance during the intervention week, which ended on day 14. Secondary outcomes were improved sleep during the 2 weeks before days 29 and 43, parental overall happiness with sleep, and improved sleep latency. RESULTS: On June 6, 2005, the data safety monitoring board voted unanimously to stop the trial early because of lack of effectiveness of diphenhydramine over placebo. Only 1 of 22 children receiving diphenhydramine showed improvement compared with 3 of 22 receiving placebo. To reach the a priori determined sample size and have a positive outcome (ie, rejecting the null hypothesis), the trial would have needed to enroll 16 more participants in each arm, with 15 of the 16 in the diphenhydramine group and 0 of 16 in the placebo group improving. CONCLUSION: During 1 week of therapy and at follow-up 2 and 4 weeks later, diphenhydramine was no more effective than placebo in reducing nighttime awakening or improving overall parental happiness with sleep for infants.
Authors: Miek C Jong; Lydia Ilyenko; Irina Kholodova; Cynthia Verwer; Julia Burkart; Stephan Weber; Thomas Keller; Petra Klement Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med Date: 2016-05-08 Impact factor: 2.629