| Literature DB >> 33410930 |
Moran Gilat1, Nathaniel S Marshall2, Dries Testelmans3, Bertien Buyse3, Simon J G Lewis4.
Abstract
Rapid Eye Movement sleep behavior disorder (RBD) is a parasomnia causing sufferers to physically act out their dreams. These behaviors can disrupt sleep and sometimes lead to injuries in patients and their bed-partners. Clonazepam and melatonin are the first-line pharmacological treatment options for RBD based on direct uncontrolled clinical observations and very limited double-blind placebo-controlled trials. Given the risk for adverse outcomes, especially in older adults, it is of great importance to assess the existing level of evidence for the use of these treatments. In this update, we therefore critically review the clinical and scientific evidence on the pharmacological management of RBD in people aged over 50. We focus on the first-line treatments, and provide an overview of all other alternative pharmacological agents trialed for RBD we could locate as supplementary materials. By amalgamating all clinical observations, our update shows that 66.7% of 1,026 RBD patients reported improvements from clonazepam and 32.9% of 137 RBD patients reported improvements from melatonin treatment on various outcome measures in published accounts. Recently, however, three relatively small randomized placebo-controlled trials did not find these agents to be superior to placebo. Given clonazepam and melatonin are clinically assumed to majorly modify or eliminate RBD in nearly all patients-there is an urgent need to test whether this magnitude of treatment effect remains intact in larger placebo-controlled trials.Entities:
Keywords: Benzodiazepines; Circadin; Drugs; Lewy body dementia; Multiple system atrophy; Parkinson’s disease; Pharmacotherapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33410930 PMCID: PMC8739295 DOI: 10.1007/s00415-020-10353-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurol ISSN: 0340-5354 Impact factor: 4.849
Fig. 1Flowchart of search results and screening
Fig. 2Overview of study designs used to test pharmacological interventions for treating RBD in the adult population. Abbreviations: RCT = Randomized controlled trial; POS = Prospective single arm open-label cohort study; RMH = Retrospective study based on medical history; CR = Case report
Systematic overview of all prospective observational studies on the pharmacological management of RBD
| Study Design | Study (First author, year) | Clinical population | Treatment (Daily dosage) | Groups (n subjects) [Age in years] | RBD screening method | RBD outcome measure(s) | Main results on RBD | Level of evidence ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clonazepam | |||||||||
| DB-RCT | Shin, 2019 [ | Parkinson | (A) Clonazepam (0.5 mg) daily for 4 weeks (B) Matched placebo (0.5 mg) daily for 4 weeks | (A) Active (n = 19) [66, 48–73]* (B) Placebo (n = 20) [70, 56–77] | RBD single screening question | (1) CGI | Non-effective No other outcomes of RBD assessed | I-B | |
| POS | Li, 2016 [ | iRBD | Clonazepam (0.125–1.0 mg) at baseline and (0.125–3.0 mg) at follow up 28.8 ± 13.3 months later | Active (n = 39) [68.3 ± 7.8] -27 remained on therapy -10 had prescription changed -2 were not on therapy at follow-up | PSG | (1) RWA on PSG (2) Movements during sleep on PSG (3) RBDQ-HK modified to cover past 3 months | Worse RWA and no reduction in movements during sleep on PSG. Subjective improvement reported in 66.7% of subjects | II-B | |
| POS | Iranzo, 2005 [ | iRBD, Parkinson, and MSA | If clinically required, clonazepam (0.25–0.5 mg) was started at diagnosis and titrated up in 0.25–0.5 mg increments to clinical response and tolerability. Mean follow-up across all subjects was 26.9 ± 21.3 months later | Active -iRBD (n = 39) taking mean dose of 0.89 (0.55) mg/day [68.4 ± 5.9] -Parkinson (n = 45) taking mean dose of 0.72 (0.42) mg/day [64.8 ± 7.8] -MSA (n = 26) taking mean dose of 0.63 (0.22) mg/day [62.0 ± 7.1] | PSG | (1) Clinical response to clonazepam (Substantial, partial, no response, in %) | Subjective improvement (substantial or partial) reported in almost all subjects, except 3.1% of the iRBD cases. No side effects in Parkinson, whereas 11.1% of MSA and 25% of iRBD reported side effects, mainly somnolence | II-B | |
| POS | Lappiere, 1992 [ | iRBD, with one case presenting soft cerebellar signs on MRI | Clonazepam (0.5–2.0 mg) for a duration of 2 months | -Active (n = 5) [58.6, 44–65]* | PSG | (1) RBD episodes on PSG (2) Phasic EMG density on PSG at REM (3) RSWA on PSG | (1) Subjective improvements reported though occasional sleep-talking and limb-jerking observed (2) Reduction in phasic EMG density at REM (3) No reduction in RSWA | II-B | |
| Melatonin | |||||||||
| DB-RCT | Gilat, 2020 [ | Parkinson | (A) PR-melatonin (Circadin, 2 × 2 mg) for 8 weeks (B) Matched placebo (2 × 2 mg) for 8 weeks | (A) Active (n = 15) [65.3 ± 6.9] (B) Placebo (n = 15) [67.9 ± 5.3] | PSG | (1) Frequency of RBD in 2nd month of treatment based on self-report diary entries (2) RWA on PSG in a subset of n = 8 on melatonin and n = 6 on placebo (3) Several RBD questionnaires (4) CGI-I | Non-effective Also no group differences seen for RWA on PSG, the CGI, or any of the RBD Questionnaires | I-B | |
| DB-RCT | Jun, 2019 [ | i-RBD | (A) PR-melatonin (Circadin, 1 × 2 mg) + matched placebo (2 × 2 mg) for 4 weeks (B) PR-melatonin (Circadin, 3 × 2 mg) for 4 weeks (C) Matched placebo (3 × 2 mg) for 4 weeks | (A) Active 1 (n = 7) [68.1 ± 9.1] (B) Active 2 (n = 9) [64.7 ± 8.3] (C) Placebo (n = 9) [66.4 ± 8.5] | PSG | (1) CGI-I (2) RBDQ-KR questionnaire after 4 weeks of treatment (3) DEB frequency recorded by patients on daily diary | Non-effective on either primary- or any secondary outcomes on RBD, including diary entries. RWA on PSG not assessed post-treatment | I-B | |
| DB-RCT | Kunz, 2010 [ | Mixed diagnoses (5 iRBD, 1 Parkinson, 2 Narcolepsy + PLMS) | (A) Melatonin (3 mg) for 4 weeks (B) Placebo for 4 weeks | Subjects (n = 8) entered in cross-over study and randomized to first receive melatonin or placebo therapy for 4 weeks and switch treatments after 3–5 days of washout period [53.8, 26–67]* | PSG | (1) Number of REM epochs without RWA on PSG (2) CGI severity | Compared to baseline, melatonin significantly reduced number of REM epochs with RWA and improved CGI, whereas the improvement seen during placebo did not reach significance. No differences were found for RWA or CGI severity scores when comparing melatonin to placebo | I-B | |
| POS | Takeuchi, 2001 [ | RBD, idiopathic or with unknown concomitant diagnoses (not reported) | Melatonin (3 mg) that in some subjects was titrated up to 9 mg according to degree of clinical RBD symptoms | Total of 15 subjects with RBD assessed at baseline and at a non-specified point in time during therapy ‘when their clinical symptoms were improved or stable’ [63.5, SD or range not reported] | PSG | (1) Clinical opinion (2) % Tonic/Phasic REM activity on PSG (3) Melatonin blood concentration levels at 3hour intervals | Remarkable improvement noted in 3/15 and partial improvement in 10/15 patients. Significant reduction in tonic REM EMG activity on PSG. Melatonin concentration increased in a subset of patients with low baseline melatonin levels | II-B | |
| POS | Kunz, 1999 [ | Mixed diagnoses (2PD, 2 iRBD, 1 RBD with hypertension, 1 RBD with sympathetic dysautonomia) | Melatonin (3 mg) for 6 weeks | Total of 6 subjects assessed before and after therapy [54, 26–71]* | PSG | (1) Clinical opinion (2) Number of REM epochs without RWA on PSG (3) Movement time in bed based on actigraphy data | Subjective improvements in 5/6 patients with presumed long-term effects lasting weeks or even up to 22 months in one subject. Reduced REM epochs without muscle atonia on PSG seen after 6 weeks of melatonin compared to baseline | II-B | |
| Ramelteon | |||||||||
| POS | Esaki, 2016 [ | iRBD | Ramelteon (8 mg) for 8.3 ± 6.8 weeks | Active (n = 12) [70.9, 52–81] | PSG | (A) RWA on PSG (B) RBDSS on PSG (C) VAS-scale for subjective RBD severity rated by partner | Non-effective on PSG or VAS-scale, though subjective severity trended towards a significant improvement. Some subjects with worsening RWA reported subjective improvements | II-B | |
| POS | Kashihara, 2016 [ | Parkinson | Ramelteon (8 mg) for 12 weeks | Active (n = 35) -24 screened positive for probable RBD -6 stopped therapy due to adverse events -3 were lost to follow-up [69.1 ± 11.1] | RBDSQ (Japanese version) | RBDSQ (Japanese version) | Significant improvement in 13 patients with probable RBD, but also in 11 patients without probable RBD | II-B | |
| Dopamine-agonists | |||||||||
| POS | Sasai, 2012 [ | iRBD with PLMS | Pramipexole (0.21 ± 0.09 mg) for 9.1 ± 7.1 months | Total of 15 subjects assessed before and after treatment period [66.5, 57–75] | PSG | (1) Four-point severity scale based on clinical opinion (2) Subjective frequency of nightmares (3) RSWA on PSG | Subjective partial improvements were noted for 12/15 patients | II-B | |
| POS | Kumru, 2008 [ | Parkinson | Pramipexole (0.54 mg) divided in 3 dosages with last dosage taken one hour before bedtime, for 3 months | Total of 11 PD with untreated RBD on levodopa monotherapy at study entry assessed before and after 3 months of pramipexole therapy [62.1 ± 8.0] | PSG | (1) Three point severity scale on subjective frequency of RBD by patient and bed-partner (2) Subjective frequency of unpleasant dreams by patients and bed-partners (3) RWA on PSG 4) % of time spent with DEB during REM sleep (4) Three point severity scale of DEB on PSG by blinded assessors | Non-effective on both subjective and objective PSG measures | II-B | |
| POS | Fantini, 2003 [ | iRBD | Pramipexole (0.125 mg/24 hr) titrated up by 0.125 mg every 3 days until a mean final dosage of 0.78 ± 25 mg/24 hr, 1–9 months later | Total of 8 subjects with iRBD assessed before and after 4.5 (range 1–9.5) months of therapy [66 ± 6.8] | PSG | (1) Four point subjective severity rating based on patient and bed partner self-report of RBD severity on (2) RWA on PSG (3) DEB on PSG | Subjective sustained improvement in 5/8 patients and reduced simple DEB on PSG, though RWA on PSG worsened on therapy compared to baseline | II-B | |
| POS | Wang, 2016 [ | Parkinson | Rotigotine (2 mg/24 hr) titrated up to 16 mg over 8 weeks followed by 12–20 weeks of dose-maintenance | Active (n = 11) [66.27 ± 8.47] | PSG | (A) RWA on PSG (B) DEB on PSG (C) RBDQ-HK | Non-effective on PSG measures. Subjective improvement reported in 63.64% of subjects | II-B | |
| POS | Dušek, 2010 [ | Parkinson | PR-ropinirole for 5–13 weeks at the dosage closest to the dosage of immediate release ropinorole already taken by the subjects at study entry for past 3.4 ± 1 years | Total of 35 PD, of whom only 5 had RBD, taking immediate release ropinorole 2–5 times daily at study entry who were switched to a similar dose (17.2 ± 6 mg) of PR-ropinorole and followed-up 5–13 weeks later [62.5, 44–75]* | PSG | RBDSQ | Non-effective in subset of 5 PD with RBD at study entry | II-B | |
| Acetylcholinesterase inhibitors | |||||||||
| SB-RCT | Brunetti, 2014 [ | iRBD with MCI | (A) Rivastigmine patch (4.6 mg/24 hr) for 30 days (B) Placebo patch for 30 days | Subjects (n = 25) deemed refractory to melatonin or clonazepam therapy entered in cross-over study and randomized to first receive rivastigmine or placebo therapy for 30 days and switch treatments after 7 days of washout period [63.0, 49–81]* | PSG | (A) RBD frequency recorded on diary by bed-partners | Improvement in subjective RBD frequency on rivastigmine compared to placebo | I-B | |
| DB-RCT | Di Giacopo, 2012 [ | Parkinson | (A) Rivastigmine patch (4.6 mg/24 hr) for 3 weeks (B) Placebo patch for 3 weeks | Subjects (n = 12) deemed refractory to melatonin or clonazepam therapy entered in cross-over study and randomized to first receive rivastigmine or placebo therapy for 3 weeks and switch treatments after 7 days of washout period. Two dropped out [66.7 ± 7.3] | PSG | (A) RBD frequency recorded on diary by bed-partners (B) RWA on PSG in subset of 4 subjects | Significantly lower frequency of RBD on diary during rivastigmine, but not placebo. No change on PSG in subset of 4 subjects | I-B | |
| NMDA antagonist | |||||||||
| DB-RCT | Larsson, 2010 [ | Parkinson with dementia (PDD) or DLB | (A) Memantine (5 mg) for 24 weeks titrated up to 20 mg at week 4 of therapy (B) Placebo | (A) Active (n = 25) [76.4 ± 6.5] (B) Placebo (n = 22) [76.3 ± 5.0] | Probable RBD based on subjective rating on a single item of the Stavanger Sleep Questionnaire (SSQ): “Is the patient physically active during sleep?” | Four-point subjective severity rating on a single item of the SSQ regarding physical activity during sleep, which may or may not have occurred during REM sleep. The baseline frequency of patients with probably RBD was 54% and equally distributed between the two groups | Probable RBD severity decreased significantly following memantine compared to placebo, though careful interpretation is warranted due to possible non-RBD specificity of outcome measure | I-B | |
| SSRI | |||||||||
| POS | Yamamoto, 2006 [ | IRBD | Paroxetine (10-40 mg) for an unknown duration | (A) Active (n = 19) [64.7 ± 7.8] | PSG | (A) Subjective RBD severity rating (Mild, Moderate, Severe) | Subjective RBD improved to a mild state in 11 and to a moderate state in 5 patients, while in 3 patients severe RBD persisted. Treatment was ceased in 2 due to side-effects | III-B | |
Daily dose presented as mean ± SD mg/day; Age in years presented as [mean ± SD], or [mean, range]; * = one or more subjects could be < 50 years of age
CGI = Clinical Global Impression scale; DB-RCT = Double-blinded randomized controlled trial; DEB = Dream Enactment Behaviors; (I)RBD = (Idiopathic) REM sleep Behavior Disorder; Parkinson = Parkinson’s disease; PLMS = Periodic Limb Movements; POS = Prospective open-label study (i.e., no control intervention); PR = Prolonged Release; PSG = Polysomnography; QA = Quality Assessment; RBDQ-HK = RBD Questionnaire Hong Kong; RBDSQ = RBD Screening Questionnaire; RBDSS = RBD Severity Scale based on PSG; RWA = REM sleep without atonia; SB-RCT = Single-blinded RCT; SSRI = Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitor; VAS = Visual Analogue Scale
Quality assessment of the randomized controlled trials assessing the pharmacological management of RBD in adults
Summary of items from the NIH quality assessment tool (nhlbi.nih.gov): 1 = Randomized; 2 = Randomization adequate; 3 = Concealed; 4 = Blinding subjects; 5 = Blinding assessors; 6 = Groups matched at baseline; 7 = Overall dropout ≤ 20%; 8 = Differential dropout ≤ 15% between groups; 9 = Adherence to intervention; 10 = Other interventions avoided; 11 = Outcome assessed using valid and reliable measures; 12 = Sample size large enough for 80% power; 13 = outcomes and analyses pre-specified (registered); 14 = All received treatment allocated to. Green background with ‘✓’ = low risk of bias; Red background with ‘✕’ = high or unclear risk of bias
Update on the total number of responders per drug used to treat RBD as based on clinical interpretation
| Drug class | Drug type | YES | PARTIAL | NO | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Benzodiazepine | Clonazepam1 | 51 | 1026 | 684 (66.7) | 159 (15.5) | 183 (17.8) |
| Clonazepam + Melatonin | 6 | 13 | 3 (23.1) | 6 (46.1) | 4 (30.8) | |
| Clonazepam + Adjunctive | 10 | 69 | 41 (59.4) | 3 (4.4) | 25 (36.2) | |
| Temazepam | 3 | 3 | 1 (33.3) | 0 (0) | 2 (66.7) | |
| Zopiclone | 4 | 12 | 7 (58.3) | 0 (0) | 5 (41.7) | |
| Other | 6 | 22 | 3 (13.6) | 0 (0) | 19 (86.4) | |
| Melatonin (+ agonist) | Melatonin1 | 22 | 137 | 45 (32.9) | 37 (27.0) | 55 (40.1) |
| Melatonin + Adjunctive | 2 | 3 | 0 (0) | 2 (66.7) | 1 (33.3) | |
| Ramelteon | 3 | 16 | 5 (31.3) | 1 (6.2) | 10 (62.5) | |
| Agomelatine | 1 | 3 | 3 (100) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | |
| Dopamine (+ agonist) | Levodopa | 4 | 45 | 8 (17.8) | 1 (2.2) | 36 (80) |
| Pramipexole | 6 | 126 | 71 (56.3) | 4 (3.2) | 51 (40.5) | |
| Ropinirole | 4 | 7 | 0 (0) | 1 (14.3) | 6 (85.7) | |
| Rotigotine | 1 | 11 | 7 (63.6) | 0 (0) | 4 (36.4) | |
| Anticholinergic | Donepezil | 4 | 56 | 1 (1.8) | 3 (5.4) | 52 (92.8) |
| Rivastigmine | 3 | 36 | 25 (69.4) | 1 (2.8) | 10 (27.8) | |
| NMDA antagonist | Memantine | 1 | 24 | NR | NR | NR |
| Gabapentinoid | Gabapentine | 3 | 16 | 12 (75) | 0 (0) | 4 (25) |
| Pregabalin | 1 | 3 | 2 (66.7) | 0 (0) | 1 (33.3) | |
| Noradrenergic agonist | Clonidine | 2 | 2 | 1 (50) | 0 (0) | 1 (50) |
Antidepressants (per class) | SSRI | 5 | 24 | 0 (0) | 17 (70.8) | 7 (29.2) |
| Tricyclic | 6 | 9 | 1 (11.1) | 0 (0) | 8 (88.9) | |
| Other | 3 | 8 | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 8 (100) | |
| Antipsychotics | Mixed types | 6 | 9 | 3 (33.3) | 1 (11.1) | 5 (55.6)* |
| Anticonvulsants | Phenobarbital | 1 | 1 | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 1 (100) |
| Lamotrigine | 1 | 1 | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 1 (100) | |
| Oxcarbazepine | 1 | 1 | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 1 (100) | |
| Gamma-hydroxybutyric acid | Sodium oxybate | 4 | 4 | 4 (100) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
| Sodium oxybate + Pramipexole | 1 | 1 | 1 (100) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | |
| Other | Yi-Gan San | 2 | 18 | 13 (72.2) | 0 (0) | 5 (27.8) |
| Yi-Gan San + Adjunctive | 1 | 19 | 4 (21.1) | 0 (0) | 15 (78.9) | |
| Cannabidiol | 1 | 4 | 4 (100) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | |
| Aspirin | 1 | 1 | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 1 (100) | |
| Metropolol | 1 | 1 | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 1 (100) |
% = Percentage of total sample per drug type; YES = Full responders, authors reported clear and sustained improvements without side effects; PARTIAL = Partial responders, authors reported improvements, but with some RBD symptoms remaining or some non-troublesome side-effects occurring; NO = Non-responders, authors reported no sustained improvement or the treatment was discontinued due to troublesome side-effects; 1 = Currently the first-line treatment options; * = Some of the antipsychotic drugs induced or worsened RBD. Abbreviations: SSRI = Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitor; NMDA = N-Methyl-D-aspartate; NR = Not reported