| Literature DB >> 32272607 |
Beata Rzepka-Migut1, Justyna Paprocka2.
Abstract
Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) are neurodevelopmental disorders with disturbed melatonin secretion profile and sleep problems. The growing incidence of ASD and ADHD inspires scientists to research the underlying causes of these conditions. The authors focused on two fundamental aspects, the first one being the presentation of the role of melatonin in ASD and ADHD and the second of the influence of melatonin treatment on sleep disorders. The authors present the use of melatonin both in the context of causal and symptomatic treatment and discuss melatonin supplementation: Dosage patterns, effectiveness, and safety. Sleep disorders may have a different clinical picture, so the assessment of exogenous melatonin efficacy should also refer to a specific group of symptoms. The review draws attention to the wide range of doses of melatonin used in supplementation and the need to introduce unified standards especially in the group of pediatric patients.Entities:
Keywords: autism spectrum disorder (ASD) attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD); melatonin; sleep disorders
Year: 2020 PMID: 32272607 PMCID: PMC7226342 DOI: 10.3390/brainsci10040219
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Sci ISSN: 2076-3425
Melatonin level assessment in the group of patients with autism spectrum disorder (ASD).
| References | Number of Patients | Material | Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nir I et al., 1995 [ | 10 patients with ASD | serum | 1. Similar results of mean daily melatonin levels were measured in serum in the group of patients with ASD and the control group. |
| Tordjman S et al., 2005 [ | 49 patients with ASD | urine | 1. Low melatonin levels were observed in 63% (31/49) of patients with ASD. |
| Melke J et al., 2008 [ | 43 patients with ASD | plasma | 1. Low melatonin levels were observed in 65% of patients with ASD. |
| Tordjman S et al., 2012 [ | 43 patients with ASD | urine | Patients with ASD showed lower levels of nocturnal 6-SM excretion in urine than those in the control group. |
| Pagan C et al., 2014 [ | 278 patients with ASD | plasma | Melatonin levels in patients with ASD and their relatives were significantly lower than in the control group. |
| Abdulamir HA et al., 2016 [ | 60 patients with ASD | serum | 1. Patients with ASD presented lower levels of melatonin than the control group. |
| Benabou M et al., 2017 [ | 157 patients with ASD | plasma | Phenotypic variation and changes in melatonin levels in patients with ASD and their families are the result of environmental and genetic factors. |
| Braam W et al., 2018 [ | 60 mothers of a child with ASD | urine | 1. Mothers of children with ASD had significantly lower levels of 6-SM in urine compared to the control group. |
| Maruani A et al., 2019 [ | 78 patients with ASD | plasma | 1. Patients with ASD presented lower levels of melatonin than their relatives and people from the control group. |
Melatonin level assessment in the group of patients with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).
| References | Number of Patients | Material | Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Van der Heijden KB et al., 2005 [ | 87 patients with ADHD-SOI | saliva | ADHD patients with concomitant chronic idiopathic insomnia at the onset of sleep presented significantly delayed DLMO and sleep phase relative to the ADHD-noSOI group. |
| Van Veen MM et al., 2010 [ | 34 patients with ADHD | saliva | 1. Melatonin production in the ADHD group began 83 min later than the control group. |
| Baird AL et al., 2012 [ | 13 patients with ADHD | saliva | 1. In the group of patients with ADHD disturbed rhythm of melatonin relative to the control group was observed. |
| Bijlenga D et al., 2013 [ | 12 patients with ADHD | saliva | 1. In the group of people with ADHD, DLMO was delayed by about 1.5 h relative to the control group. |
| Büber A et al., 2016 [ | 27 patients with ADHD | urine | Patients with ADHD had significantly higher levels of total 24-h urinary excretion of 6-OH MS than controls. |
(ADHD-SOI)—ADHD-related sleep-onset insomnia, (ADHD-noSOI)—ADHD without sleep-onset insomnia.
Melatonin supplementation in ASD patients.
| References | Study Design | Number of Patients | Age | Diagnosis | Melatonin Dosage | Time of Melatonin Supplementation (before Bedtime) | Duration of Melatonin Supplementation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gupta R, et al. 2005 [ | Retrospective study | 9 | 2–11 years | ASD | 2.5–5 mg | 45 min | |
| Giannotti F, et al. 2006 [ | Open label | 20 | 2.6–9.1 | ASD | 3 mg | 30–40 min | 2 years |
| Garstrang J, et al. 2006 [ | DB-RCT | 7 | 4–16 | ASD | 5 mg | 4 weeks | |
| Andersen IM, et al. 2008 [ | Retrospective study | 107 | 2−18 | ASD | 0.75–6 mg | 30–60 min | 1.8 ± 1.4 years |
| Wasdell MB, et al. 2008 [ | DB-RCT | 50 | 2.05−17.81 | Severe intellectual loss | 5 mg CR | 20–30 min | 10 days |
| Wirojanan J, et al. 2009 [ | DB-RCT | 12 | 2–15.25 | ASD | 3 mg | 30 min | 2 weeks |
| Wright B, et al. 2011 [ | DB-RCT | 16 | 4–16 | ASD | 2–10 mg | 30–40 min | 3 months |
| Cortesi F, et al. 2012 [ | DB-RCT | 74 | 4–10 | ASD | 3 mg CR | 21:00 | 12 weeks |
| Gringras P, et al. 2012 [ | DB-RCT | 51 | 3.7–15 | DD alone | 0.5–12 mg | 45 min | 12 weeks |
| Malow B, et al.2012 [ | Open label | 24 | 3−10 | ASD | 1–6 mg | 30 min | 14 weeks |
| Goldman S, et al. 2014 [ | Open label | 9 | 3−8 | ASD | 1–3 mg | 30 min | 3–6 weeks |
| Gringras P, et al. 2017 [ | DB-RCT | 58 | 2−17 | ASD | 2–5 mg of PedPRM | 13 weeks | |
| Maras A, et al. 2018 [ | DB-RCT | 51 | 2−17.5 | ASD | 2–10 mg of PedPRM | 30−60 min | 52 weeks |
| Schroder CM, et al. 2019 [ | DB-RCT | 58 | 2−17.5 | ASD | 2–5 mg of PedPRM | 30−60 min | 13 weeks |
| Malow BA, et al. 2020 [ | DB-RCT | 74 | 2−17.5 | ASD | 2–10 mg of PedPRM | 30−60 min | 104 weeks |
DB-RCT—double blind, randomized control trial, CR—controlled-release, FR—fast release, DD—developmental delay, PedPRM—pediatric-appropriate 3 mm diameter prolonged release melatonin minitablet, SMS—Smith–Magenis syndrome.
Effects of melatonin supplementation in ASD patients.
| References | Sleep Latency | Total Duration of Sleep | Behavior | Night−Wakings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gupta R, et al. 2005 [ | + | + | ||
| Garstrang J, et al. 2006 [ | + | + | + | + |
| Wasdell MB, et al. 2008 [ | + | + | ||
| Wirojanan J, et al. 2009 [ | + | + | − | |
| Wright B, et al. 2011 [ | + | + | − | |
| Gringras P, et al. 2012 [ | + | + | + | |
| Cortesi F, et al. 2012 [ | + | + | + | |
| Malow B, et al.2012 [ | + | − | + | − |
| Goldman S, et al. 2014 [ | + | + | ||
| Gringras P, et al. 2017 [ | + | + | ||
| Maras A, et al. 2018 [ | + | + | + | |
| Schroder CM, et al.2019 [ | + |
(+) improvement (−) without any significant difference.
Melatonin supplementation in patients with ADHD.
| References | Study Design | Number of Patients | Age | Diagnosis | Melatonin Dosage | Time of Melatonin Supplementation (before Bedtime) | Duration of Melatonin Supplementation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Weiss MD, et al. 2006 [ |
| 19 | 6.5–14.7 years | ADHD | 5 mg | 20 min | 10 days |
| Van der Heijden KB, et al. 2007 [ |
| 53 | 6–12 | ADHD | 3–6 mg FR | 19:00 | 4 weeks |
| Hoebert M, et al. 2009 [ |
| 94 | 12.39 ± 0.25 | ADHD | 3–6 mg | 18:30–23:00 | 3.66 ± 0.12 year |
| Mohammadi MR, et al. 2012 [ |
| 26 | 7–12 | ADHD | 3–6 mg | 8 weeks | |
| Mostafavi SA, et al. 2012 [ |
| 26 | 7–12 | ADHD | 3–6 mg | 8 weeks | |
| Ayyash HF, et al. 2015 [ |
| 45 | 6.3 ± 1.7 | Intellectual disability ASD ADHD | 2.5–10 mg | 30 min | 326 days |
| Masi G, et al.2019 [ |
| 74 | 11.6 ± 2.2 | ADHD | 1–5 mg | 1–2 h | 4 weeks–12 months |
DB-RCT—double blind, randomized control trial, FR—fast release.
-Effects of melatonin supplementation in patients with ADHD.
| References | Sleep Latency | Total Duration of Sleep | Behavior | Cognition | Quality of Life | Frequent Awakenings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Van der Heijden KB, et al. 2007 [ | + | − | − | − | ||
| Hoebert M, et al. 2009 [ | + | + | ||||
| Mostafavi SA, et al. 2012 [ | + | + | ||||
| Mohammadi MR, et al. 2012 [ | + | + | − | |||
| Ayyash HF, et al. 2015 [ | + | + | + |
(+)—improvement (−)—without any significant differences.