| Literature DB >> 21358972 |
Daniel P Cardinali1, Analía M Furio, Luis I Brusco.
Abstract
Melatonin secretion decreases in Alzheimer´s disease (AD) and this decrease has been postulated as responsible for the circadian disorganization, decrease in sleep efficiency and impaired cognitive function seen in those patients. Half of severely ill AD patients develop chronobiological day-night rhythm disturbances like an agitated behavior during the evening hours (so-called "sundowning"). Melatonin replacement has been shown effective to treat sundowning and other sleep wake disorders in AD patients. The antioxidant, mitochondrial and antiamyloidogenic effects of melatonin indicate its potentiality to interfere with the onset of the disease. This is of particularly importance in mild cognitive impairment (MCI), an etiologically heterogeneous syndrome that precedes dementia. The aim of this manuscript was to assess published evidence of the efficacy of melatonin to treat AD and MCI patients. PubMed was searched using Entrez for articles including clinical trials and published up to 15 January 2010. Search terms were "Alzheimer" and "melatonin". Full publications were obtained and references were checked for additional material where appropriate. Only clinical studies with empirical treatment data were reviewed. The analysis of published evidence made it possible to postulate melatonin as a useful ad-on therapeutic tool in MCI. In the case of AD, larger randomized controlled trials are necessary to yield evidence of effectiveness (i.e. clinical and subjective relevance) before melatonin´s use can be advocated.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer's disease; Melatonin; clinical trials.; minimal cognitive impairment; neuropsychological tests
Year: 2010 PMID: 21358972 PMCID: PMC3001215 DOI: 10.2174/157015910792246209
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Neuropharmacol ISSN: 1570-159X Impact factor: 7.363
Clinical Studies on Melatonin Efficacy in AD
| Design | Subjects (M, F) | Treatment | Study´s Duration | Measured | Results | Reference(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Open-label study | 10 (6, 4) demented patients | 3 mg melatonin p.o. daily at bed time | 3 weeks | Daily logs of sleep and wake quality completed by caretakers | Seven out of ten dementia patients having sleep disorders treated with melatonin showed a significant decrease in sundowning and reduced variability of sleep onset time | [ |
| Open-label study | 14 (8, 14) AD patients | 9 mg melatonin p.o. daily at bed time | 22 to 35 months | Daily logs of sleep and wake quality completed by caretakers. Neuropsychological assessment. | At the time of assessment, a significant improvement of sleep quality was found. Sundowning was not longer detectable in 12 patients and persisted, although attenuated in 2 patients. Clinically, the patients exhibited lack of progression of the cognitive and behavioral signs of the disease during the time they received melatonin. | [ |
| Case report | Monozygotic twins with AD of 8 years duration | One of the patients was treated with melatonin 9 mg p.o. daily at bed time. | 36 months | Neuropsychological assessment. Neuroimaging. | Sleep and cognitive function severely impaired in the twin not receiving melatonin as compared to the melatonin-treated twin. | [ |
| Open-label, placebo-controlled trial | 14 AD patients | 6 mg melatonin p.o. daily at bed time or placebo | 4 weeks | Daily logs of sleep and wake quality completed by caretakers. Actigraphy | The 7 AD patients receiving melatonin showed a significantly reduced percentage of nighttime activity compared to a placebo group. | [ |
| Open-label study | 11 (3, 8) AD patients | 3 mg melatonin p.o. daily at bed time | 3 weeks | Daily logs of sleep and wake quality completed by the nurses. | Analysis revealed a significant decrease in agitated behaviors in all three shifts, and a significant decrease in daytime sleepiness. | [ |
| Open-label study | 45 (19, 26) AD patients | 6–9 mg melatonin p.o. daily at bed time | 4 months | Daily logs of sleep and wake quality completed by caretakers. Neuropsychological assessment. | Melatonin improved sleep and suppressed sundowning, an effect seen regardless of the concomitant medication employed to treat cognitive or behavioral signs of AD. | [ |
| Randomized double blind placebo controlled cross over study | 25 AD patients | 6 mg of slow release melatonin p.o. or placebo at bed time | 7 weeks | Actigraphy | Melatonin had no effect on median total time asleep, number of awakenings or sleep efficiency. | [ |
| Double-blind, placebo-controlled study | 20 (3, 17) AD patients | Placebo or 3 mg melatonin p.o. daily at bed time | 4 weeks | Actigraphy. Neuropsychological assessment. | Melatonin significantly prolonged the sleep time and decreased activity in the night. Cognitive function was improved by melatonin. | [ |
| Randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trial | 157 (70, 87) AD patients | 2.5-mg slow-release melatonin, or 10-mg melatonin or placebo at bed time | 2 months | Actigraphy. Caregiver ratings of sleep quality | Non significant trends for increased nocturnal total sleep time and decreased wake after sleep onset were observed in the melatonin groups relative to placebo. On subjective measures, caregiver ratings of sleep quality showed improvement in the 2.5-mg sustained-release melatonin group relative to placebo. | [ |
| Open-label study | 7 (4, 3) AD patients | 3 mg melatonin p.o. daily at bed time | 3 weeks | Actigraphy. Neuropsychological assessment. | Complete remission of day night rhythm disturbances or sundowning was seen in 4 patients, with partial remission in other 2. | [ |
| Randomized, placebo-controlled study | 17 AD patients | 3 mg melatonin p.o. daily at bed time (7 patients). Placebo (10 patients) | 2 weeks | Actigraphy. Neuropsychological assessment. | In melatonin-treated group, actigraphic nocturnal activity and agitation showed significant reductions compared to baseline. | [ |
| Randomized, placebo-controlled study | 50 AD patients | Morning light exposure (2,500 lux, 1 h) and 5 mg melatonin (n= 16) or placebo (n= 17) in the evening. Control subjects (n=17) received usual indoor light (150-200 lux). | 10 weeks | Nighttime sleep variables, day sleep time, day activity, day:night sleep ratio, and rest-activity parameters were determined using actigraphy. | Light treatment alone did not improve nighttime sleep, daytime wake, or rest-activity rhythm. Light treatment plus melatonin increased daytime wake time and activity levels and strengthened the rest-activity rhythm. | [ |
| Case report | 68-year-old man with AD who developed rapid eye movement (REM) sleep behavior disorder | 5 – 10 mg melatonin p.o. daily at bed time. | 20 months | Polysomnography | Melatonin was effective to suppress REM sleep behavior disorder | [ |
| Randomized, placebo-controlled study | 41 (13, 28) AD patients | Melatonin (8.5 mg immediate release and 1.5 mg sustained release) (N = 24) or placebo (N = 17) administered at 10:00 P.M. | 10 days | Actigraphy. | There were no significant effects of melatonin, compared with placebo, on sleep, circadian rhythms, or agitation. | [ |
Clinical Studies on Melatonin Efficacy in MCI
| Design | Subjects (M, F) | Treatment | Study´s Duration | Measured | Results | Reference(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Double-blind, placebo-controlled,crossover study | 10 (4, 6) patients with MCl | 6 mg melatonin p.o. daily at bed time | 10 days | Actigraphy. Neuropsychological assessment. | Melatonin enhanced the rest-activity rhythm and improved sleep quality (reduced sleep onset latency and number of transitions from sleep to wakefulness). Total sleep time unaffected. The ability to remember previously learned items improved along with a significant reduction in depressed mood. | [ |
| Double-blind, placebo-controlled pilot study | 26 individuals with age-related MCI | 1mg melatonin p.o. or placebo at bed time | 4 weeks | Sleep questionnaire and a battery of cognitive tests at baseline and at 4 weeks | Melatonin administration improved reported morning "restedness" and sleep latency after nocturnal awakening, and also improved scores on the California Verbal Learning Test-interference subtest. | [ |
| Open-label, retrospective study | 50 (13, 37) MCI outpatients | 25 had received daily 3-9 mg of a fast-release melatonin preparation p.o. at bedtime. Melatonin was given in addition to the standard medication | 9-18 months | Daily logs of sleep and wake quality. Initial and final neuropsychological assessment. | Patients treated with melatonin showed significantly better performance in neuropsychological assessment. Abnormally high Beck Depression Inventory scores decreased in melatonin-treated patients, concomitantly with an improvement in wakefulness and sleep quality. | [ |
| Randomized, double blind, placebo-controlled study | 354 individuals with age-related cognitive decay | prolonged release melatonin (Circadin, 2 mg) or placebo, 2 h before bedtime | 3 weeks | Leeds Sleep Evaluation and Pittsburgh Sleep Questionnaires, Clinical Global Improvement scale score and quality of life. | Melatonin treatment resulted in significant and clinically meaningful improvements in sleep quality, morning alertness, sleep onset latency and quality of life | [ |
| Long-term, double-blind, placebo-controlled, 2 x 2 factorial randomized study | 189 (19, 170) individuals with age-related cognitive decay | Long-term daily treatment with whole-day bright (1000 lux) or dim (300 lux) light. Evenin | 1 to 3.5 years | Standardized scales for cognitive and noncognitive symptoms, limitations of activities of daily living, and adverse effects assessed every 6 months. | Light attenuated cognitive deterioration and also ameliorated depressive symptoms. Melatonin shortened sleep onset latency and increased sleep duration but adversely affected scores for depression. The combined treatment of bright light plus melatonin showed the best effects. | [ |
| Prospective, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, study | 22 (15, 7) individuals with age-related cognitive decay | Participants received 2 months of melatonin (5 mg p.o. /day) and 2 months of placebo | 2 months | Sleep disorders were evaluated with the Northside Hospital Sleep Medicine Institute (NHSMI) test. Behavioral disorders were evaluated with the Yesavage Geriatric Depression Scale and Goldberg Anxiety Scale. | Melatonin treatment significantly improved sleep quality scores. Depression also improved significantly after melatonin administration. | [ |